Woe is me - the remake


I just saw the first trailer for the remake w/ Paris Hilton and Chad Michael Murray. House of Wax is one of my favorite films and nearly no one knows about it, now they will think that it is just a teen slasher flick w/ Paris Hilton. I'm so sad! I loved this film and I could boil the people who decided to remake it in a vat of wax and then make them into sculptures. Wait, didn't someone do this already, like, VINCENT PRICE?!?!

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[deleted]

[deleted]

"This rash of remakes will be over soon."

Are you kidding? In this era of mediocrity we live in, there are so few original ideas around. The studios will keep taking great films of the past, give them a neo-Hollywood facelift, and pawn them off to a new generation that is ignorant to the classics. It's all about the greenbacks.

P.S. Vincent Price rocks!

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[deleted]

I am so sick of the remakes that are stalemating Hollywood these days...doesn't anyone have original ideas anymore? I guess not...except for Eli Roth and he's an *beep*

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I'm afraid you are the one who is 'really that stupid'. The rash of remakes won't be over soon, and GOOD movies will continually be ruined by retarded audiences who have no taste or cinematic knowledge...

I, too, had an attachment the original film; it was one of my favorites as a kid. Now some dirty no-talent slut gets to be in the insulting remake. What a waste...

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There's only ONE dirty slut in the remake?

I agree with everybody that remakes are horrible, just like everybody who likes movies as something other than dumb entertainment. If they continue to make money, though, that's what they'll give us. Sad, but true.

What's interesting to me is how they can take a movie like "House Of Wax," which sounds like a pretty psychological picture, and turn it into a dumb slasher flick where "brains" are defined as a body part that can be splattered across a wall. I suppose it's not too hard to remove intelligence from a film for its remake. Why can't they remake a dumb movie and make it smarter? Apart from the obvious "dumb makes more money" answer.

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You have no idea what you are talking about. If you didn't catch it, House of Wax is a Dark Castle movie. This is the film company formed by Joel Silver and Robert Zemeckis with the specific goal of recreating the movies of William Castle (who you apparently identify as Vincent Price). This roster so far includes House on Haunted Hill, 13 Ghosts, and House of Wax (Vincent Price starred in all three of the originals). I think that this production company has done an admirable job so far and are due a little respect, regardless of their casting choices (which are often out of their hands anyway).

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i just rented house of wax. i was so surprised at how well it was done. now it's my favorite movie. vincent price was so cool in that movie. i just hope this movie isn't crappy.

IT'S ME!! I WAS THE TURKEY ALL ALONG!!! - Gir

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Vincent Price was not in thirteen ghosts. and House of wax was not a william Castle movie. Look at the site pages for the movies, and you will see.

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These remakes suck far beyond the casting. None of them deserve any respect. And House of Wax is not a William Castle movie.

Life sometimes acts like it's seen one too many bad movies. -Humphrey Bogart
[whateva]

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I don't know if you are a big fan of Vincent Price like I am but another big disapointing remake of one of his great films was House on Haunted Hill. The original was fantastic but the remake was just another gore film. The only good part about the remake was that they found an actor who could look and sound a lot like Vincent Price. The trailers for the House of Wax remake don't even look like they kept much of the same story line.

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Well I gotta give it up for Geoffery Rush always I watched that movie for him(seems to be a pattern for me to watch my favorite actors do crappy movies once in a while)...although no one can do Vincent Price like Vincent Price. The remake of House on Haunted Hill had the most ghastly dialogue around....and Chris Kattan should stick to comedy.

As for the remake, sounds like it's really gory. But gory doesn't do it for me anymore.It used to, and then I saw the Evil Dead movies and that's the only gore I like now. It has to be campy. That's where gore belongs. Movies like this one always seem creepier than the really gory ones. I wonder how many people saw House of Wax for Paris Hilton....Hmmm Vincent Price or Paris Hilton, Vincent Price or Paris Hilton....THIS IS A TOUGH ONE :'-(

"So....'MANOS'! yeah you know 'MANOS!'"

BTW, I'd stick with Vincent Price ^_^

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Comments like some of the ones here make me so angry... im only just 18, so wasnt around when the original versions of films such as 'House of Wax' were out. Remakes, however bad or good they are, shouldn't really matter, as several of my friends and I only hear of such films because of their remakes. If it wasnt for the remakes of 'House of Wax', 'The Amityville Horror' etc, then we wouldn't have been able to watch and appreciate the origional versions.

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I don't see why you wouldn't have been able to see the originals if it hadn't been for the remakes. If you're a horror fan then surely you would have done some research into classic horror films instead of waiting around to be spoon fed things to watch by Hollywood.

www.derangedpictures.com - First feature to start shooting next year!

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I think what he's saying is that remakes, good or bad, raise the profile of the original movie. With something like Texas Chainsaw Massacre that point's irrelevant, cause everyone's at least heard of the original anyway, but with older and more obscure films like this, then I can understand why fans of the original would be pissed off (I'd probably be pissed off if I heard there was remake being made of one of my favourite movies), but ultimately they encourage a few people to check out the original, which can't be a bad thing, can it?

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by the way..."the house of wax (1953)" it's a remake of "Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)" - see in dvd...

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[deleted]

It doesn't stop you from ''loving the original'' but it certainly cheapens it.

NO MORE *beep* ING REMAKES!!!!!!!!!

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Funny!!!???

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Funny!!!???

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I'm only just 18, and I've known who Vincent Price is since I was 7 or 8. I've also been obsessed with him for that long. Don't use your "young age" as an excuse for remakes of classic movies... That being said, This remake was no Vincent Price film, but was suprisingly well done... I know the rest of you are probably going to shoot me for this, but meh, who cares?

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Both of the House on Haunted Hills scared me. The scene where the doctor and nurses turn around and look at the dumb blonde creeps me out like hell. And i love the begining of the film at the theme park, that was neat.
and in the original... the Caretaker coming out of nowhere... OMG.. gave me nightmares for years.. still creeps me out just seeing a picture of her.... I can't look at it for more than a couple seconds, and never in the dark. haha

My Site: Xanga.com/BunnyFun

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i love this movie and i think that the violence is so realistic

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The remake was excellent.

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If you enjoy cinema, please check out my website @ http://FilmPix.cjb.net!

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I think it's cute that no one remembers that the 1953 HOUSE OF WAX was a remake of the excellent 1933 movie THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (which also featured a gimmick process-2 color Technicolor)-directed by the excellent craftsman Michael Curtiz. I wonder if audiences in 1953 thought that the cinematic world was collapsing when the Vincent Price HOUSE OF WAX appeared? After all, there were just as many remakes in the 1950s as there are today. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS...A STAR IS BORN...AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER...THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH...MOGAMBO...KING SOLOMON'S MINES...BEN-HUR...SCARAMOUCHE...THE PRISONER OF ZENDA...SHOW BOAT...MOBY DICK...RIDING HIGH...SOME LIKE IT HOT...YOU'RE NEVER TOO YOUNG...ROSE MARIE...THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME...SILK STOCKINGS...QUO VADIS...IVANHOE...A FAREWELL TO ARMS...THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET...IMITATION OF LIFE...

Matt

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Well put, Charlie-89. Incidentally, I don't even believe "remake" is the proper word to use about this film (the 2005 movie). The storyline is completely different, the characters are completely different, the setting, etc. etc. It's like two entirely different songs which just happen to have the same title.

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You have 2 understand though, remakes made alot of sense back in those days even if it did ruin the integrity of the others, but still, it gave people a chance to see some of the movies they loved in a new renewed way... and, before it was a movie in 1933, it was a play so ya....

Elway

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Hey...EXCELLENT observation, Charlie--89. The "House Of Wax" WAS a remake of the '33 "Mystery Of The Wax Museum". As a matter of fact, WanerBros. DVD of the Vincent Price '53 film also includes the "Mystery...Wax Museum" on it as a 'bonous feature', making it a double-featured DVD. Both films are great, & I've loved the Price film since I was 12, & saw it in actual 3-D @ a local Classic Film House. I just ( today ) bought the 2005 "House Of Wax". When I was @ the theater to see "Star Wars:Episode 3" this past May, I overheard a lot of good comments 'bout it PLUS I love the show "24", which makes me an Elisha Cuthbert fan.

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Its not that they make remakes now, but that the remakes now are so bad. After all, look at how often A Star is Born was made and not all were bad movies. And both Mystery of the Wax Museum and House of Wax were good efforts in their day. Different people with different ideas, trying to produce some excellence on the screen. Vincent Price even remade one of his own earlier movies, Tower of London, only changing his part from minor to lead. My problem with the current crop of remakes is that they sacrifice intelligent scripting for sex and violence, usually without any real logic or development.

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Hey guys, just saw the remake a couple of nights ago. Just wondering, is House of Wax originally from the Tales from the Crypt series? Or is it completely on it's own? I loved Tales from the Crypt and the HoW DVD I rented had a commercial for Tales at the beginning. I can see it being a show from there, lots of similarities, etc. Thanks.




SSS

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hey smart guys and movie elitists alike. i hope you know that THIS is also a remake. check out 1933 "Mystery of the Wax Museam" Remakes have been happeneing forever. Movies have always been made form books, plays, and just stories, so relax. there will always be remakes. always.

p.s. do your research before you go on a rant

-besides, everyone dies all by himself.

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OK, I just wanted to weigh in my opinion on this and agree with most of the sentiments shared here. I've been a big fan of Vincent Price for years, especially this movie. Given the current state of horror films, I wasn't expecting much from the "remake." And was surprised...not in a good way, but because I found it so disturbing that I actually swore off movies for a while.

When you compare the "remake" to the original version, there's just so much about it to despise, and Paris Hilton is only the least of them. Fortunately, the Princess of Bitchiness doesn't have much to do in this movie except provide just another victim. But her character is pretty indicative of the kind of people you can expect in this movie. When you take the 1953 classic (I won't call it the original, since I know the Toth film is a remake too), the new one just doesn't measure up in terms of character, story, or even ANYTHING.

For one thing, the 1953 film has characters you can actually care about. Vincent Price's Henry Jarrod is such a sympathetic villain, whether anyone realizes it or not. He's a brilliant artist who lost his whole life's work due to his sleazy partner's greed, and even if you can't accept his methods for repopulating his museum, you can agree with his motives for it. Jarrod is exactly the kind of "good man gone bad" character that Price always played so well, especially in later stuff like The Abominable Dr. Phibes and Theater of Blood. It's the same with Phyllis Kirk's Sue Allen. She's a smart brave girl who figures out the museum's big secret first, even if no one believes her.

The "remake," on the other hand, has precious little of that. The Sinclair brothers, the wax-wiedling psychos in this one (the screenwriters, by the way, had the audacity to name the deformed one Vincent, a sad attempt at tribute that made me squirm) don't generate much sympathy. Throughout the movie, we don't get any real explanation as to WHY they're doing all this (and they're not just filling a museum; they're waxing an entire TOWN, somehow). Instead of tortured artists exacting revenge, they're just a couple of creepy Southern boys who like to torture people for no apparent reason.

Don't expect much from the victims either. The cast does well enough with what they're given, but the script doesn't give us anything other than sad stereotypes--a bunch of stupid kids doing stupid things. I know that's about all you can expect from a modern day teen slice-em-up, but it's still irritating when you compare it to the 1953 version.

THat leads to the most disturbing scene in the "remake"--one where Jared Padalecki gets waxed alive...not only alive, but SEMI-CONSCIOUS, for God's sake. When you compare that to Phyllis Kirk's damsel-in-distress scene (or Faye Wray's scene in Mystery in the Wax Museum), it's even more disturbing. In both of the earlier films, it's cool and suspenseful because of two things. For one, you know it's not really going to happen. Any minute, Frank Lovejoy or Glenda Farrell is going to break in and stop the psycho from turning the valve. In the 2005 version, however, you know old Jared is pretty much finished when Vincent slashes his Achilles tendon.

What's more, in the new version, you don't especially care. Phyllis Kirk is such a likable character that you don't WANT her to end up on display in Jarrod's museum. Padalecki's character, however, is the quintessential Horror Movie Moron, the kind of guy who just can't resist seeing what's hidden inside the big creepy house, the one that makes you want to scream "WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING???" While he's getting prepped and covered, it's a revolting spectacle, but not so much because you like the guy as much as because it shows the direction horror movies are going these days.

It's not about the suspense anymore. Or the atmosphere, or the story, or the characters, or anything that's always made horror films a treat. Now, it's more about the shock factor, or how disgusting you can make a death scene. And that's too bad, considering the kind of amazing history horror has had in the last century. It's doubly sad when you consider that the film talent pool hasn't been drained yet. I did find the set design and a lot of the camera work in the 2005 "remake" impressive, and it would be interesting to learn what Jaume Collett-Serra could do with a more competant script.

So do yourself a favor. Just keep enjoying the 1953 classic (and the 1933 original) and don't watch the "remake" unless you're geared up for the serious slandering of a great film. I understand they'll soon be selling this one and the 2005 version as part of a combined set. Sorry, but they don't deserve to share the same shelf, let alone a box.



"Peter, those are Cheerios..." Brian Griffin

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