Another late 90's Teen Film is being remade, "The Craft"

OmegaK2099

Gettin' It In
Joined
May 23, 2012
Messages
33,353
Reputation
3,682
Daps
53,022
i saw that crap on tv the other day, only reason i watched was because i remember i used to have a crush on neve campbell in this flick
 

boskey

Top Rankin
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
15,124
Reputation
3,581
Daps
62,257
This is the type of film that deserves a remake IMO. A mild cult hit, not really classic at all with a pretty basic generic premise (teenage girl witches). Theres really nothing to fukk up...

But I never really sat down and watched it. Maybe its more special to ya'll :manny:
 

Milk N Cookies

(Self-titled) Queen of the Film Room
Supporter
Joined
Sep 4, 2013
Messages
27,028
Reputation
10,810
Daps
62,098
Reppin
Movies and tv shows
Ice-Cube-Says-Nice-Things-Angrily-On-Jimmy-Kimmel-2014.jpg

Why can't they remake bad movies like Dragonball Eveloution
 

kingdarius

Wtf u talkin bout? Ya Bish
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
24,551
Reputation
2,750
Daps
47,110
Reppin
FayetteNam, North Carolina #byrdgang
women LOVE this fukking movie, i always thought it was super duper average tho and without fairuza bulk performance it prolly would've been trash tbh
Is nothing scared! But for real, this shyt doesn't even seem to fit with current teens and their interests. The dark, grungy, angsty 90's made this movie work, weirdo outcast kids. I don't see why this needs to be remade, plenty corny teens stories to do.

I'm guessing she's all that, 10 things i hate about you, and save the last dance will be next :beli:
:skip:
 

satam55

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Jul 16, 2012
Messages
45,261
Reputation
4,903
Daps
89,169
Reppin
DFW Metroplex

Like so many iconic genre films before it, Andrew Fleming's cult 1996 teen horror-thriller The Craft has a remake in the works, this one with Honeymoon helmer Leigh Janiak attached to co-write and direct. But as producer Douglas Wick tells HitFix, the word "remake" doesn't quite do the project justice.

"I wouldn't say that we wouldn't so much call it a remake as a 'twenty years later,'" Wick told us during an interview for the 20th anniversary of the seminal teen classic. He continued later: "There will be callbacks to the original movie, so you will see there is a connection between what happened in the days of The Craft, and how these young women come across this magic many years later."

Wick, who also produced the original film, additionally gave us a sense of the specific angle that Janiak (Honeymoon) and her co-writer Phil Graziedi are bringing to the update, which was first reported last May:

"Here are some young women who once again discover the power of magic, and we explore their emotional lives, their wants, their fears, their longings, as they become empowered," he continued. "So you know, the same way you use a war movie to explore the psyche of men, you get to create a heightened world to explore the psyche of these women. And so that seemed like an opportunity that was ripe and a way to make a movie that would be very much about now. And of course, part of that was just finding a talent that felt like enough of a real talent that you'd really be interested in her interpretation of this kind of story now, and of course Leigh is exactly that."

In addition to Wick, we also spoke with original star Rachel True and director Andrew Fleming about the developing remake/indirect sequel (if you haven't already, please check out our special video piece on the original film's 20th anniversary above), and while both expressed support for the project -- "I'm like, hey, go for it," Fleming told us -- True has some reservations with the idea.

"I'm kind of over remakes in general, but I also want to be supportive," she said. "If they think it's a good idea, Sony, to remake it, then they should, and it'll probably be awesome. But I just feel like, why not do another witch movie?"

While on the subject of the remake, True also revealed that not only has she had conversations about paganism with Warlock star Julian Sands (!), but that both agreed a direct sequel would be a more interesting way to go. "Like, I'd love to see what the girls are up to now that they're women," said True, who believes Rochelle would now be "running a makeup-y, perfume company," "because I think that women are super powerful as well. They're in -- we're in our sexuality. We own it, as opposed to girls who are a little shy about it. So I would love to see what the same group of women are up to now."

Acknowledging "that will never happen," True did offer an intriguing casting idea for the "new" Rochelle: Divergent and Mad Max: Fury Road star Zoe Kravitz, the Hollywood offspring of Lisa Bonet (a friend of True's) and Lenny Kravitz.

"I used to...babysit her and I used to make her run lines with me," she said, adding: "Literally, I remember making six year old, five year old Zoe, like, 'Here, read this! Read this with me, I have an audition.' So I would love to see her play -- I think she has the sensibilities to play that part."

You can watch our full 20th anniversary video on The Craft below.
 
Top