Are you tired of all these so-called “new” movies that are just rebooting classic films from the 1980s and 1990s? Don’t worry, Hollywood has you covered: Bruce Willis and Eli Roth are remaking a movie from all the way back in 1974!
Deadline reports that Bruce Willis has signed on to star in the latest Death Wish remake, under the direction of horror filmmaker Eli Roth (Hostel ). The project has changed filmmakers multiple times over the last few years, including Joe Carnahan (The Grey ) and Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado (Big Bad Wolves ). The latest version of the script was written by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, who are best known for classy biopics like Ed Wood , The People vs. Larry Flynt and the acclaimed TV series The People v O.J. Simpson .
Death Wish will be the third adaptation of Brian Garfield’s vigilante novel, about a man who starts murdering criminals after his wife and daughter are victimized. Charles Bronson starred in the original Death Wish in 1974, a film that spawned four sequels over the course of 20 years. The novel was adapted again into the thriller Death Sentence , directed by The Conjuring 2 filmmaker James Wan and starring Kevin Bacon.
Eli Roth is not a subtle filmmaker, but then again Death Wish isn’t a terribly subtle story. Still, in an environment where gun violence is an ongoing, controversial and serious topic of conversation, one wonders just how delicately a new Death Wish will need to tread in order to tell its story without earning itself any accusations of pandering.
Then again, time will tell if this new version of Death Wish will even get off the ground, or become yet another footnote in the history of this remake’s development.
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and Canceled Too Soon , and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved , Rapid Reviews and What the Flick . Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani .
The Best Movies of 2016 That You’ve Already Missed:
Top Photo: 20th Century Fox
The Best Movies of 2016 That You've Already Missed
Everybody Wants Some!!
Richard Linklater's spiritual successor to Dazed and Confused is a cheerful, wonderfully acted drama about a group of college baseball players getting ready for another year of dating, sports and personal growth. The cast is fantastic and the depiction of male bonding is some of the best in years.
Photo: Paramount Pictures
Hail, Caesar!
The Coen Bros. were playing to a smaller crowd this Hail, Caesar! but anyone who loves the Golden Age of Hollywood will have a blast with this spirited comedy. Josh Brolin plays a studio fixer who juggles a kidnapped movie star, a cowboy who can't act and a pregnant starlet who needs to adopt her own baby in this smart, hilarious throwback.
Photo: Universal Pictures
High Rise
J.G. Ballard's vicious social commentary, about a self-sufficient skyscraper that devolves into literal class warfare, has been adapted into a brutal satire by filmmaker Ben Wheatley. The chaos emerges so gradually it's almost hard to tell when, exactly, this movie goes from strange to apocalyptic. Tense, impressive stuff.
Photo: StudioCanal
A Hologram for the King
Tom Hanks slipped under everyone's noses with a slight, sweet dramedy about a salesman trying to peddle hologram technology in Saudi Arabia. A Hologram for the King is kind-hearted look at the ways all our cultural differences make us, unexpectedly, very much the same.
Photo: Roadside Attractions
The Invitation
Karyn Kusama's brilliant psychological thriller is a pressure cooker, and for the longest time you don't even know for sure if anything really is cooking. A man is invited to his ex-wife's dinner party, and begins to suspect something is terribly amiss. But maybe the point isn't what he's anxious about, but the fact that he's anxious...
Photo: Drafthouse Films
Keanu
A major release but one that failed to find a major audience, Keanu is a raucously funny comedy about two dweeby guys who are forced to act like badasses in order to rescue their kidnapped kitten, named "Keanu," from violent criminals. Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele are incredibly funny together, and the absurd plot keeps this lovable comedy moving briskly.
Photo: Warner Bros.
Last Days in the Desert
Christian cinema has been capturing headlines over the last few years, and yet the best film tackling the subject came and went very quickly in May. Ewan McGregor gives one of his best performances as Jesus Christ, who accepts the devil's challenge (the devil also played by Ewan McGregor) to fix the problems of a small family. But sometimes life's little plights are just as impossible as the big ones.
Photo: Broad Green Pictures
Love & Friendship
Whit Stillman takes his trademark wit and transports it back in time with Love & Friendship , an adaptation of an unpublished Jane Austen novel. Kate Beckinsale is sublime as Lady Susan, who is such a master manipulator that it's hard to tell if she's the movie's hero or villain. Uproarious and classy.
Photo: Amazon Studios
Midnight Special
Mud and Take Shelter director Jeff Nichols tried his hand at the sci-fi/fantasy genre earlier this year, and the result felt just as independent as earlier, critically acclaimed dramas. Michael Shannon plays a father who must protect his superpowered son from the government and a dangerous cult, and although the plot evokes classic 1980s cinema, the way Nichols lays the story out feels fresh and exciting.
Photo: Warner Bros.
The Nice Guys
A character-driven 1970s private detective story in the vein of Kiss Kiss Bang Bang? It's as good as it sounds but it was never going to set the summer box office on fire. Ryan Goslin and Russell Crowe are fabulous as mismatched partners trying to solve a mystery involving porn. Very funny stuff!
Photo: Warner Bros.
Nina Forever
One of the most original and meaningful horror films in years, Nina Forever is the sad story of a man who can't get over the death of his girlfriend, because every time he tries to have sex with someone else his ex's corpse appears and judges them. Gory without being violent, shocking but impressively sensitive.
Photo: Jeva Films
Pee-wee's Big Holiday
What was supposed to be a major comeback for Paul Reubens ended up coming to Netflix, and without much publicity. But this impossibly adorable film about Pee-wee meeting actor Joe Manganiello (playing himself) and traveling across the country to attend the True Blood star's birthday party is an absolute joy.
Photo: Netflix
A Perfect Day
Sweet and sad, all wrapped up together, Fernando León de Aranoa's film stars Benicio Del Toro, Tim Robbins, Olga Kurylenko and Mélanie Thierry as aid workers trying to remove a corpse from a well in what used to be Yugoslavia. It turns out to be a nearly impossible challenge in a story that would be Kafkaesque if it wasn't so very hopeful. (Fortunately, it is.)
Photo: IFC
Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping
Another major summer release and ambitious comedy that barely got off the ground, the new film from Lonely Island (Akiva Schaffer, Andy Samberg, and Jorma Taccone) features wall-to-wall laughs at the expense of contemporary celebrity and nonsensical hit songs. Give this one time. Audiences will find it and fall in love with it eventually.
Photo: Warner Bros.
Southbound
One of the most interesting horror anthologies in recent memory, Southbound tells interlocking stories of people on the desert highway, meeting monsters on the side of the road or becoming monsters themselves. All the installments are solid, but David Bruckner's story about a hit-and-run gone wrong(-er) is an unforgettable pulse-pounder.
Photo: The Orchard
The Wailing
Very few horror films play out like The Wailing , a strange Korean import about a hapless cop who gets involved in a murder investigation that might just be supernatural in origin. Na Hong-jin's film uses humor to suck you into the hero's life, so that the horror seems even more tragic when it pops up (usually in unexpected ways).
Photo: Well Go USA