jetboy wrote:Well Im American and I loved LTROI and disliked LMI so that theory doesnt really work. On top of that, Im not the only one.
According to my passport, so am I. American, that is. I liked it, too, and so your statement seems to imply that since I liked it, too, I can't say that an American can't or won't like LTROI. When I say that Reeves made a movie an American might understand, I don't mean that all Americans who see it will understand it or like it, I simply mean that the movie
may be
more reachable to the average American. Furthermore, we've both seen plenty of evidence of Americans having seen LTROI and thought it stupid long before LMI was even a widely circulated rumour. It'd really a shame IMDB doesn't have longer term storage so we could wade back two or three years to see just how idiotic some of the reactions have been.
If you want to know the truth, the first couple of times I watched LTROI, I, too, thought it a bit brain-damaged.
No, you're not the only one. But we are so few.... so few...
jetboy wrote:Your Lolita reference has a space of 30 years between them. I think this is significant. Its the blatantly doing it to make money off of it and not inspiration that irks me so.
Yes, and there are several thousand miles and a language or two separating LMI from LTROI.
jetboy wrote:Yes LMI could and has advertised LTROI to a wider audience but I still think viewing LMI first can alter the enjoyment of LTROI and LTROI did alot of the original work that LMI benefitted from. Its not baseless because I have heard people say so.
I've heard lots of people say lots of baseless things. Don't get me started.
LTROI is virtually unknown in the US. It's around, there's a copy for rent at the video store just around the corner from me, and there's a couple copies at the place that sells used DVDs just down the road. LMI is less unknown, I see more copies of it floating around than of LTROI. I didn't see either at Walmart in the $5 bin, and that's not a good sign. Generally, if it no longer sells well, Walmart drops it.
But the longer odds are that Joe Sixpack will run across LMI before he'll run across LTROI, and maybe he'll pick it up. Maybe he'll like it, maybe not. Seems to me, longest odds are, he'll not be much impressed with it, maybe he'll say "Yea, Abby was a cute kid". He won't know or care that it was a "remake", and probably couldn't be arsed to try to find it on Amazon.
These things, they have spectra - or, if you like, areas under a bell-shaped curve. Some will absolutely hate it, these people will fall under the left-handed skinny part of that curve, and some will absolutely love it and will fall under the right-handed skinny part. Most will just go "Meh", and they're the ones that give the curve its bulge in the middle.
Translation? Only a small fraction of the people who actually DO see LMI will be moved by it in a way we consider positive.
Something similar is true for LTROI, but we're looking at smaller numbers now. If I remember correctly, LTROI screened for only a single week at the Big City an hour's drive from where I live, and with its two dozen odd screens, it
can carry even sluggishly selling stinkers for several weeks. LTROI never even made it out into my little corn field, never came within an hour of me.
Compare this to LMI's having stayed in the Big City for
three weeks in spite of the fact that the first two times I saw it, there weren't enough people in the theatre to fill an SUV, and the last time I'd seen it, I had the
whole stadium-style room to myself.
Of the relatively few folks who watched LMI and gone on to hunt down LTROI, I'd fully expect behaviour over "large numbers" to again describe these bell-shaped curves, with some of the LMI-initiated hating LTROI (skinny left hand side), some of them absolutely loving it (skinny right hand side) and the bulk of them saying "Meh, that was mildly interesting..." (the bulged part of the curve). The only problem with making this kind of statement is that NOW we're into small sampling theory. Skew, kurtosis and suchlike could go all sorts of crazy directions.
My point, and I maintain it, is that many more Americans will see LMI than LTROI, and it's my hope that they'd realise there had been an original, try to find it, and from there try to understand it.
I'm not hopeful. I've never found a place on the Internet dedicated to discussing LMI that isn't overwhelmed with the intellectually void and the academically catastrophically challenged.
jetboy wrote:Other forms of cliche is the bullies. Their all about a foot taller than Kodi with none of the complexities of the original who sometimes dont want to bully.
I don't recall that LMI's bullies were seamlessly enthusiastic, either. Do you have a copy of LMI? Maybe you should watch it a few more times.
jetboy wrote: The mother might as well be Carries mother, so over the top that it further renders Oskar as being born bad because they dont see that as normal as the mother is, its not enough.
I've not figured out what Owen's mother's deal is. That's OK; I've not figured out what Oskar's mother's deal is, either. It's true that we're not explicitly shown that Oskar's mother suffers any obvious "flaw" apart from being absent a great deal, and prone to treating Oskar as some kind of possession rather than an actual
son. It's true that Owen's mother is a religious fanatic on the surface, and a drunk. Yes, Joe Sixpack might claim that Owen's home life is a lot tougher for that very reason, but his cousin, the one who actually managed to graduate high school and can read, write and honestly understand words of two syllables or more, knows better: neither boy effectively
has a mother to confide in and rely on.
jetboy wrote:She doesnt even know about Oskars bullying or if she does explains it away as kids being kids. Either way she's not helping her son. LMI's mother could desensities future LTROI viewers from these subtleties.
Owen's mother similarly knows nothing.
jetboy wrote: I dont consider Abbey to be amongst these "clicheisms".
This is a hopeful sign.
jetboy wrote:Another way that LMI could affect future viewers of LTROI is taking away the ambiguity of the bloodgetter. Alot of people who dont mind LMI didnt see this in the original. I saw it and what an experience. Your going along with this love story and bam it dawns on you why Hakan poured acid on his face and the anwer is the love going on with Oskar. There was no need to explain. Unfortunately people who view LMI first wont be able to have my experience without any hints.
"The love going on with Oskar" is why Hakan poured acid on his face? How did we draw
this conclusion? What experience did you have with the manner of Hakan's passing?
jetboy wrote:And the biggest offense of all is that the source of all that LMI benefitted is the one that suffers from LMI. LMI knew that it had to make room for the already existing LTROI. LTROI didnt yet it did most of the work and came up with all the great ideas. LTROI was used and I mean this in the negative way.
Such is the nature of time. Forerunners often don't know there's some future iteration to "make room for".
And now that the topic has been hijacked Yet One More Time, I'm going to suggest that this topic is all about "Who Loves Abby", and not about "That Nasty American Movie That Stole from LTROI and Destroyed It".
Bashing LMI in any way this thread is off topic.