Tue
Dec 16 2008 12:39pm
Remaking “The Crow”: Bad Idea, or Terrible Idea?

This weekend, Variety announced that Stephen Norrington will be helming a remake of Alex Proyas’ graphic novel adaptation The Crow.

You might have known the moment it happened; it was as if millions of Goths cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.

The 1994 cult classic follows musician Eric Draven as he rises from the dead a year after his murder to take revenge on the men who murdered his girlfriend in between shredding some mean riffs on his roof. Though the film paved the way for innumerable grungy supernatural antiheros, its biggest claim to legend is the death of its star, Brandon Lee, during filming.

The franchise continued ill-advisedly through a theatrically-released sequel and two direct-to-video installments that did little for the Crow mythology. (Though employing Edward Furlong for a few months in 2004 was probably a good deed. Dude needed the money.)

Of all the movies calling out for remakes (can’t we just reshoot all of Liv Tyler’s scenes from Lord of the Rings and make everyone happy?), The Crow seems an unlikely candidate. The low-budget original had a certain fly-by-night (har) quality that made it very obviously a labor of love, and the movie’s structural flaws were smoothed over by the sheer style of it all. Proyas would pull off a similar trick five years later with Dark City.

However, the timing for a Crow remake in 2009 is questionable, at best. Competition is stiff: Christopher Nolan has taken Batman over to the noir side with enormous success, and Frank Miller has eagerly set up shop in the Mostly Monochromatic Workshop where he cranks out violent, poorly-plotted graphic-novel adaptations every two years whether the public wants them or not.

And let’s face it: even if the public was crying out for another installment of the emo, corvidian asskicker, Norrington is hardly the right man for the job. His last movie was League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (marketing title: LXG), a celluloid disaster equivalent to burning a bag of money on Alan Moore’s doorstep. It should have won him an injunction from every comic publisher in the world forbidding him to touch source material ever again; instead, he’s benefiting from Hollywood’s infinite capacity to offer second chances to male directors who blow things up. (If Crow 2.0 shoots two guns without looking, turns into a murder of CGI crows, or drives a souped-up Rolls Royce at any point, don’t pretend you didn’t see it coming.)

Luckily for purists, you won’t have to worry about the remake treading over familiar ground. Norrington promises, “Whereas Proyas’ original was gloriously gothic and stylized, the new movie will be realistic, hard-edged and mysterious, almost documentary-style.”

Realistic, hard-edged, mysterious, documentary-style: just like League of Extraordinary Gentlemen!

15 comments
Samantha Brandt
1. Talia
No, no, no, no, no, no. Someone stop this man.
Jason Henninger
2. jasonhenninger
"Frank Miller has eagerly set up shop in the Mostly Monochromatic Workshop where he cranks out violent, poorly-plotted graphic-novel adaptations every two years whether the public wants them or not."

Ouch!

I mean, you're absolutely right, but still..ouch!

--

I wish Hollywood would stop doing remake after remake and just take the risk to try on new material more often.
Dayle McClintock
3. trinityvixen
You beat me to commenting on this. You're also funnier about it than I would have been because I'm just over here crying. Why, God, why?
wordtipping
4. wordtipping
I just cannot fathom why anyone would consider this necessary at this point. The original Crow is still a fairly recent movie. It it still a pretty movie to watch and doesn't look dated at all. That and it's not exactly a successful franchise or IP like say, Batman.

If you want to be radical, make it a full CGI movie and really recreate that gothic/dystopian vibe.
Torie Atkinson
5. Torie
@ 4

CGI? No way. I think a Crow remake would be awesome if done with Nightmare Before Xmas style claymation, actually.

But this? Just. No.
Josh Kidd
6. joshkidd
I remember when The Crow came out. The movie really struck a chord with teen culture at the time. For me, The Crow is these three things: the style, the music, and Brandon Lee. Without these three things, I can't imagine any remake recapturing the spirit of the first. So, we're left with recapturing the plot. I'll pass.
Josh Kidd
7. joshkidd
If The Crow is redone as Nightmare Before Christmas style claymation, can it also be a musical?
Pablo Defendini
8. pablodefendini
@jasonhenninger #2
I wish Hollywood would stop doing remake after remake and just take the risk to try on new material more often.

ROFLMAO—one can dream. Unfortunately, as long as movie studios are run by risk-averse business executives, it's highly unlikely.
Dayle McClintock
9. trinityvixen
@Torie:

I disagree. I think that the original artwork, which is a hundred times freakier than the live-action would be really well served by an animated adaptation if it were done as faithfully (and definitely in black and white) as Persepolis.

Some things would have to be modified, of course; like the 80s hair Eric sports...
Jason Henninger
11. jasonhenninger
Since there's talk here about different animation formats, here's an idea...do it Rankin-Bass Christmas special style, in all its stuffed, whispy-clunky majesty.

Burl Ives and Fred Astaire are dead, so you'd have to get Andy Griffith to narrate. "Well, hello there! Do you know the story of Eric Draven? No? My, my. Sit yourself down and I'll tell you about about a kooky thing that happened one Devil's Night, long ago."

The advantages are clear. No one would confuse it with the original, and the chances of getting accidentally shot during production are significantly reduced.
Blue Tyson
12. BlueTyson
No, shouldn't be done, horrible idea.

10. A movie massacring lots of emo types would be fine. :) Maybe A Wanted, where the magic list of targets are all bad bands.
wordtipping
13. John Thomas or Eric
Unless this was a SinCity-like movie based on "The Crow Author's Edition" (see http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/thecrow/ ) I would hate a remake was made
marcusine alexander
14. marcie
No.

It is what it is. Make new Crow stories by all means but dont call the hero Eric Draven or resurrect city burning real estate grab shenanigans with cute skateboard urchins, mystical "eeebil" half siblings and/or anything tagged in that first film.

The Crow is like Brandon Lee's epitaph. Leave it alone. That incident ruined lives. Even the bloke who pulled the trigger was seriously messed up.

Play in Crow land, but no remakes.
For me that film packs a punch because Brandon Lee died making it. Some things have to remain sacred, even in the polished crapshoot that is Hollywood. Respect. That's the word I'm looking for. (yeah good luck, I know.)

I would make a point of not watching it. I own a dvd of the Crow and the comics. I dont/cant read them anymore, but I like having them. Havent watched the film for years.

And the movie League of Extraordinary Gentlemen did not inspire me the way the comics did.

Just an opinion.
Jack Flynn
15. JackofMidworld
Was trolling thru the past and came across this article...

On the plus side, it's now almost three whole years later and this still hasn't come to pass :)

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