
Scorehead
THE SAINT is a great, highly underrated score -- beautiful love theme, in fact...but alas, he hasn't written anything since to rival it (or even come close).MikeSkerritt wrote:I'm more turned off by the PG-13 rating than anything else. I know there are a lot of Carpenter purists out there, but THE FOG, IMHO one of his lesser films, could use an update. But not one of these WB, slicker-than-snot "family" horror films. We need a real, honest to goodness frightfest, man!
Revell I don't mind so much. He's like composer purgatory to me - nothing spectacular, nothing awful. Since THE CROW, I did like THE SAINT (gorgeous love theme) and THE NEGOTIATOR, though.
Y'know, I keep hearing horror geeks bitching about the PG-13 rating on the Fog remake, yet I didn't find the original film to be that violent.MikeSkerritt wrote:I'm more turned off by the PG-13 rating than anything else.
Jack, you are dead on about that. I was thinking that the other day as well -- if Carpenter's THE FOG had opened today it could possibly nab a PG-13.Monterey Jack wrote:Y'know, I keep hearing horror geeks bitching about the PG-13 rating on the Fog remake, yet I didn't find the original film to be that violent.MikeSkerritt wrote:I'm more turned off by the PG-13 rating than anything else.There's a surprising lack of gore (particularly from the director of The Thing
), no nudity, and not even much noticable profanity. Carpenter's film would probably slide by on a PG-13 by today's ridiculously lenient MPAA standards (can you believe the second Austin Powers movie got a PG-13?
).
I love gore, but as time goes on I find I like films that show less and go more for the "horror" or what you don't see- leave it up to the imagination. I think I said this before on another thread, but one genre of horror film that can be great without gore is the ghost film.AndyDursin wrote:To me, horror doesn't need an R rating to be scary. There are, however, "gore hounds" who like their buckets of blood and become annoyed when something isn't R. I even saw Bruce Campbell on TV the other night complaining about that very fact. That doesn't bother me in the slightest, particularly because there are so many fine supernatural films in the PG genre.Monterey Jack wrote:Y'know, I keep hearing horror geeks bitching about the PG-13 rating on the Fog remake, yet I didn't find the original film to be that violent.MikeSkerritt wrote:I'm more turned off by the PG-13 rating than anything else.There's a surprising lack of gore (particularly from the director of The Thing
), no nudity, and not even much noticable profanity. Carpenter's film would probably slide by on a PG-13 by today's ridiculously lenient MPAA standards (can you believe the second Austin Powers movie got a PG-13?
).
Growing up I was far more disturbed by POLTERGEIST than much of anything else. I remember renting THE EXORCIST in 8th grade or so, and being disappointed not by the movie so much as how little I was scared during it! (This after years of hearing my cousins tell me how scared I'd be...I guess after all that build up I anticipated something creepier!).
Scorehead, I appreciate the comments. I'm just not motivated enough to spend $10 on a lot of movies these days, knowing I can review the DVD for nothing in about 2-3 months.scorehead wrote:I must say that by turns, this was one of the worst films that I have ever seen. I wish that I had the time, or the interest, to go into detail, but this film does no justice at all to the original. In short: the pacing is bad, the acting outside of Tom Welling is atrocious (that's a stretch, I know), the story is choppy and incoherent, the effects look bad, even if they were intended for television, and even the score, although respectfully similar in tone with Carpenters efforts, is uneven and too "turned on high" for it's, or the movies, own good. More over, the "enhancements" made to the original films story line, that now connects the current residents to the atrocities of Antonio Islands founding fathers, is useless fluff and marks this movie more as an reinterpretation than a remake. And what's up with that scene of the ol' coot (there's always at least one) voluntarily getting all tangled up in the ships mooring rope that he finds exposed on the beach and leading out into the ocean and, inevitably, into the fog? The only thing that I found moderetly amusing was that they got one of Hollywoods most well know flat chested actresses (Selma Blair) to play the part that was originally so rambunctiously brought to life by an actresses (Adrienne Barbeau) that was more known for her "lung capacity" than her acting. Seriously, did anyone else notice that they fitted/stuffed Selma's bra with enough soft tissues to choke a large flea? Sadley, like a mouth full of sand, this reless effort rates a BIG THUMBS DOWN. Your better off saving up your money for that next big trip to the proctologist. I'm sure that it will be more probing, and have more depth than this theatrical blunder.
Best,
Scorehead