History repeats itself!


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"At the 94th Academy Awards, the film received seven nominations, including Best Picture. It became the second adaptation of the same source material for a previous Best Picture winner to be nominated for the same award after 1962's Mutiny on the Bounty."
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Interesting. This remake of West Side Story IS just like the remake of Mutiny on the Bounty, in more ways that just Oscar nominations.

The lavish 1962 REMAKE of Mutiny on the Bounty was directed by an A-list, Academy Award-winning Hollywood director (who had previously directed All Quiet on the Western Front, The Front Page, Of Mice & Men, Les Misérables, Ocean's 11, etc.) Nevertheless, it ended up as a notorious box office flop (it cost $19 million and only grossed $13 million) and Marlon Brando's over-the-top performance was widely ridiculed -- the film became a dumpster fire known for its on set problems, and was contrasted unfavorably to the beloved classic 1935 original, which was the highest-grossing film of 1935 and one of MGM's biggest hits of the 1930s.

Despite the public's scorn for the Mutiny remake and is complete failure to find an audience, the media and Hollywood insiders PRETENDED like audiences loved it anyway, and inexplicably nominated that turkey for a slew of Academy Awards, including "Best Picture" (of course, it failed to actually win, unlike the original version that was the runaway winner for "Best Picture" in the 1936 awards show). Pretty much all the "buzz" for the garbage remake was entirely due to fond memories of the original film, not because of anything it did on its own merits.

Interesting trivia, Brando's career took a nosedive after that crapfest but he recovered nicely a decade later with "The Godfather", and Hollywood managed to undo the damage of the pitiful 1960s remake by later doing a GOOD version of the story with 1984's "The Bounty", which was much more down-to-earth and accurate to the true story, and had a much more muted and multi-faceted performance from Mel Gibson and Anthony Hopkins.

So, if West Side Story follows the same pattern, we can expect Ansel Elgort or Rachel Zegler to redeem themselves in a decade by having the starring role in an excellent original film, and West Side Story itself to recover in about 20 years, when someone does a new interpretation of the source material that's actually thoughtful and engaging, instead of a "woke" pandering clown show.

:-)

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Funny how so many films involving Brando became dumpster fires behind the scenes!

Read up on "The Island of Dr. Moreau" some time...

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Funny how so many films involving Brando became dumpster fires behind the scenes!


True, during that time when he'd given up on acting and was just in it for the money. I think he gave up on himself right after On the Waterfront. Viewing it, he hated his own acting, and perhaps couldn't see past it to the brilliant instincts he'd always had, or he just stopped caring. He couldn't resist the money being dangled in front of him, and he took it and ran, detached and drifting from film to film, allowing his father to manage his investments, losing a lot of it in the process. He made a lot of crap, but even in those, there was the spark of Brando's greatness showing thru, as if he couldn't help himself.

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I don't think that the 2021 film version of West Side Story did win Best Picture, however, and with amply good reason.

The fact that it flopped in the box offices and the fact that Spielberg didn't make back nearly what it cost him to reboot/remake the film version of West Side Story (i. e. $100, 000,000 dollars) says something right there, too, and not for the good.

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Neither remake won "Best Picture". Mutiny 1962 lost to Lawrence of Arabia, and West Side Story 2021 lost to Coda. (unlike their predecessors, which DID win "Best Picture", in 1935 & 1961)

But both were NOMINATED for "Best Picture", when it was clear they SHOULDN'T have been.

In any case, if the defenders of Woke Side Story think "Oscar nominations" will eventually vindicate their crapfest, they need only look at how well Marlon Brando's remake has gone down in history. It has NOT stood the test of time, and is probably loathed even more now than when it was originally released.

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Boring

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It's not surprising that West Side Story 2021 failed to win the Academy Award for the Best Picture, and lost to Coda.

I admittedly knew nothing about Marlon Brando's remake of "Mutiny on the Bounty". In fact, I admittedly did not know that there was a remake of "Mutiny on the Bounty". I knew that Lawrence of Arabia did win an Academy Award for the best Picture in 1962.

The original 1961 film version of West Side Story deserved every Academy Award that it received, including Best Picture when it hit the movie theatres.

Remakes of older classic films don't generally come out very well, and Spielberg's 2021 film version of West Side Story was no exception.

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Now that the Academy Awards have passed, Spielberg's WSS will be forgotten, while Wise's WSS will continue to be regarded as a classic. There is no way Spielberg's version will be remembered by more than a handful of film aficionados sixty years from now, as Wise's version still is by millions six decades after it was released.

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Good point, liscarkat. The old, original 1961 film version of West Side Story is still a classic, it always will be, and it's the real deal all around, if one gets the drift.

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Brando's mutiny was EXCELLENT. As is this remake of West Side Story...

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