Summary

Well - made Hollywood remakes of great external movies are few and far between , but they certainly do exist . A remake of Akira Kurosawa ’s classic 1963 film , gamy and Low , was harbinger , with Spike Lee set to direct and Denzel Washington to star . Even with such an esteemed filmmaker and actor duette , the remaking has draw in illustrious skepticism . After all , Spike Lee was responsible for the critically blackball 2013 remaking of the South Korean filmOldboy , but the apprehension toward American remakes of foreign films run deeper than one representative .

Another latterly foretell remake for the 2020 filmAnother Roundproduced a like disbelief , even with Chris Rock intriguingly set to place . Hollywood remakes likePulse , The Wicker Man , andTaxihave make a justified cynicism toward more of the same . However , there are some fantastic examples where remakes really worked . Famous directors like Martin Scorsese , Quentin Tarantino , and Steven Soderbergh have made successful remakes of classical external films .

10The Departed (2006)

Directed by Martin Scorsese

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The 2006 filmThe Departedis famed not only for being one ofMartin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio ’s in effect films togetherbut also for being the first film to gain ground Scorsese his Best Director Oscar . The film also won Best Picture in its year , and its notoriety and change name conceal the fact that it ’s the remaking of a critically acclaimed Hong Kong film , Infernal Affairs . While it ’s debatable which edition is better , it ’s knockout to deny the achiever of Scorsese ’s version .

Infernal Affairsis an exciting cinema , andThe Departedsometimes mimics it frame - for - anatomy . Scorsese ’s version of the riveting offense thriller is notably longer and features a love triangle subplot , which is abstracted in Andrew Lau and Alan Mak ’s picture . The concise 101 - minute runtime ofInfernal Affairsadds to the plot ’s intensity , thoughThe Departedis a far more quality - repulse narrative . Both have their strengths , andboth are undoubtedly consummate films .

9The Magnificent Seven (1960)

Directed by John Sturges

Another remake with a changed name , The Magnificent Seven , is such an iconic Western that it ’d be well-off to omit that it ’s a remake of Akira Kurosawa’sSeven Samurai , one ofthe best samurai motion-picture show of all time . Kurosawa ’s samurai motion picture are profoundly rooted in their influence on American cinema , fromStar Warsto the westerly genre and even to Zack Snyder’sRebel Moon . The idea to take the motion-picture show ’s concept and recycle it for a Wild West setting is wizard , as the musical genre are almost synonymous with each other .

812 Monkeys (1995)

Directed by Terry Gilliam

Terry Gilliam’s12 Monkeysis a fantastically strange dystopian sci - fi risky venture , with a hilarious performance from young Brad Pitt . The movie was heavily inspired by a Gallic short film titledLa Jetée , directed by Chris Marker in 1962 . Given Terry Gilliam ’s unique cinematic voice,12 Monkeysseems like it could be only his creation . For the most part , it ’s a quintessentially Terry Gilliam movie , with his esthetical and humour coiffe the movie ’s timber . It only draws narrative divine guidance fromLa Jetée , which establish the science fabrication concept .

7The Birdcage (1996)

Directed by Mike Nichols

One of thebest Robin Williams movies , The Birdcage , is one of the most entertaining and hilarious releases of the 1990s . It ’s based on a French comedy film titledLa Cage aux Folles , which was release in 1978 and is also base on a gambol of the same name . In Hollywood , The Birdcagewas seen as groundbreaking ceremony for have LGBT characters , and it ’s still a beloved classic and feel - good movie that ’s held up well .

6Vanilla Sky (2001)

Directed by Cameron Crowe

A unique installment in Tom Cruise ’s filmography , Cameron Crowe’sVanilla Skyis a cultus classic psychological thriller . It ’s a remaking of Alejandro Amenábar ’s 1997 film , Open Your eye , star Penélope Cruz , who also stars in the remake . WhileVanilla Skyhad a far more motley critical reception than the original , it was a boxful office gain that was adore by audiences and has been a hit among film rooter since its release .

5Insomnia (2002)

Directed by Christopher Nolan

Christopher Nolan has taken heavy inspiration from foreign films more than once , asInceptiondraws heavy from the animePaprika . Insomnia , which is Nolan ’s only film that he did n’t write , is a remaking of the Norwegian film of the same name from 1997 . Erik Skjoldbjærg ’s version ofInsomniawas also met with decisive acclaim , with the fundamental difference being the stage setting , which takes place in the Norse Arctic rather than Alaska . Though the remake is n’t one ofChristopher Nolan ’s best movies , it ’s still an exemplary thriller and a worthwhile remaking .

4Silence (2016)

Despite being one of his least commercially successful , the 2016 filmSilenceis one ofMartin Scorsese ’s best moving picture . The movie is establish on the novel of the same name by Shūsaku Endō , which had previously been made twice . The first adaptation came in 1971 from Japanese filmmaker Mashiro Shinoda , and the second time by Lusitanian film maker João Mário Grilo in 1996 . Scorsese ’s and Shinoda ’s edition ofSilenceare unusually exchangeable and are some of the good cinematic exploration of religion available .

3Django Unchained (2012)

Directed by Quentin Tarantino

Quentin Tarantino’sDjango Unchainedisn’t incisively a remaking , but it pays tribute to the 1966 filmDjangoby Sergio Corbucci . Corbucci was a prominent filmmaker in the Spaghetti Western subgenre , andTarantino has consistently paid homage to niche , stylized genres of the past . The originalDjangowas monumental in its depiction of the Wild West as a gruesome , crimson place rather than the heroic mythology portray in American westerly films . Tarantino’sDjango Unchainedhonors the political theory behind revisionist Westerns , hone in on the violence and ethical issue in the American frontier .

2Solaris (2002)

Directed by Steven Soderbergh

Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky deserves to be consider amongthe best directors of all time , and he sets a high bar for remake of his films . The 1972 classicSolarisis a beautiful , philosophical geographic expedition of space travel and one of the most emotionally complex sci - fi moving picture ever made . Steven Soderbergh directed the 2002 remake , which featured George Clooney in the leading role . While it ’s not as herculean as Tarkovsky ’s film , Soderbergh’sSolarishas been cited as being closelipped to the original novel , which both are base on .

1Ambulance (2022)

Directed by Michael Bay

Michael Bay ’s motion picture are known for being tight - pace and action - packed , and the 2022 movieAmbulancedelivers on that prospect . It ’s a remake of the 2005 Danish filmAmbulancen , which has essentially the same plot , but was met with interracial inspection . The Michael Bay version did n’t meet splendid follow-up , but it ’s still an exciting action plastic film with magnetic sensation performances from Jake Gyllenhaal , Yahya Abdul - Mateen II , and Eiza González . The thematic exploration of American capitalism also benefits Bay’sAmbulance , distinguishing it from the original .

Ben Affleck as Christian drumming his hand on the table while talking to Cynthia Addai-Robinson’s Marybeth in The Accountant 2

Kaitlyn Santa Juana as Stefanie looking horrified in Final Destination Bloodlines

Keanu Reeves looking over one shoulder as John Wick in Ballerina

Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio

Headshot Of Leonardo DiCaprio In The 35th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Night

Headshot Of Matt Damon In The 74th Berlin International Film

Headshot Of Jack Nicholson In The 2007 MTV Movie Awards

A photo of actor Mark Wahlberg at a screening of Arthur The King

The heroes lined up with their guns in The Magnificent Seven

Bruce Willis and Brad Pitt in 12 Monkeys

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Headshot Of Bruce Willis In The Premiere of Motherless Brooklyn

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A banner for The Birdcage featuring the four main characters of the movie.

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A Catholic priest leaning against a Japanese man in Silence

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Headshot Of Liam Neeson In The UK premiere of Marlowe

Headshot Of Andrew Garfield In The National Theatre Up Next Gala in South Bank

Jamie Foxx as Django pointing one of his revolvers directly at the camera in Django Unchained

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Headshot Of Jamie Foxx In The European premiere of ‘Creed III’

George Clooney in Solaris

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hEADSHOT oF Yahya Abdul-Mateen II