2017-09-27, 22:11 | Link #1 |
Black Steel Knight
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Indonesia
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(Kimi no Na wa) Your Name live-action Hollywood movie
Produced by J.J. Abrams:
http://deadline.com/2017/09/your-nam...er-1202178451/ I.......don't know how to feel about this. But since the writer of the excellent Arrival (Eric Heisserer) is involved, looks like they really want this to be good. I wonder how they will translate/westernize all the elements in Shinkai's movie. Still, I don't know why Hollywood would want to make a live action out of this. All their special effects will not match the beauty of Shinkai's animation and they already done this kind of story before with Keanu Reeves & Sandra Bullock in The Lake House which resulted in lukewarm-to-negative responses from the US audience.
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2017-09-27, 22:22 | Link #2 |
Darkhero of Monstadt
Join Date: May 2015
Location: rich mansion with maids
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I don't mind with japanese live action but holywood....
So things most likely will happen there are:
Last edited by relentlessflame; 2017-09-29 at 00:22. Reason: Removed inappropriate insinuation from list |
2017-09-27, 23:08 | Link #3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: stuck between galaxies
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As far as the premise goes, it's universal enough that it can work as a live-action. Characters and setting are non-issue, so don't expect a Western adaptation to look anything like the anime, nor should it be.
I'm quite certain it'll be a straight-up Hollywood drama a la The Lake House, as Obelisk had mentioned, with elements copied/borrowed from the anime and some fancy sfx thrown in for good measure. A good example of Hollywood adaptation done well would be The Departed vis-a-vis Infernal Affairs. If a Your Name adaptation manages to be of similar calibre then I have no complaints. |
2017-09-27, 23:49 | Link #4 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Edinburgh
Age: 42
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Last edited by relentlessflame; 2017-09-29 at 00:22. |
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2017-09-28, 05:18 | Link #5 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Nov 2015
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The following words have been attributed to a statement by Makoto Shinkai on the matter:
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[Mone Kamishiraishi is not from Hida, Gifu and Ryunosuke Kamiki is not from Shinjuku, Tokyo. 石原まき子 is from Tokyo and -as far as I know- does not have Ainu ancestors, but that may be a different story -with the same name (1953).] Last edited by Verso Sciolto; 2017-10-09 at 00:44. |
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2017-09-28, 09:14 | Link #7 |
Udon-YAAAAAAAA
Join Date: Jan 2008
Age: 35
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^^ don't lie. you'd watch it anyways to see how much of a train wreck it is compared to the original. that being said, i would like to know what direction they take the story in. as it stands now, you can't really transplant the story into a typical western setting and have it work. it'd have to undergo a massive transformation with some pretty big plot changes to have it work that way.
I wonder if Shinkai will have any influence in the direction it goes in. also, one of the biggest draws of the movie was the artwork and the way they framed the shots. there's a snowball's chance in hell that they'll manage to recreate it in life action, unless they get some ridiculous cinematographer. if they wanted to adapt a Shinkai film (they probably didn't and rather wanted to capitalize on the popularity of your name) they should have done 5cm/s. it'd be infinitely easier to have a film like that in live action. it doesn't have a hollywood ending, but who cares.
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Last edited by germanturkey; 2017-09-28 at 09:32. |
2017-09-28, 10:42 | Link #8 |
Operation sneaky sneaks
IT Support
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Hic et ubique
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Maybe you're right about that: I am tempted to see how this goes, if only for the possibility that Taki and Mitsuha will have dialogue as bad as Anakin and Padme
That said, they'll have a hell of a time being faithful to the original if they decided to use another setting outside of Japan, especially with respect to things like the red string of fate and Shinto beliefs. That said, if Taki lived in LA or Vancouver, and Mitsuha lived in the Rockies, I suppose it would be plausible for them to try and find one another. This is why I mention Christopher Nolan: with his track record, he'd probably be one of the few directors able to make an adaptation like Your Name stand strong thematically without Makoto Shinkai's distinct art style, but such a direction might also deviate greatly from the original Your Name. Of course, to really get the cinematography and visuals down, I personally feel that they would be better served shooting the film in Canada
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2017-09-28, 12:06 | Link #10 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2014
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I'll keep a eye on it, as someone said it's a pretty universal story and the only way to screw it up is keep all the names the same and white wash it or make it political. I can already bet they'll change the ending and the hard part is getting 2 good actors that can play 2 opposite sex characters the same way
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2017-09-28, 14:26 | Link #11 | |
Les Pays Bass
Join Date: Jun 2011
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2017-09-28, 23:28 | Link #14 | |
Banned
Join Date: Nov 2015
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The first item on your list in this thread also puzzled me, a little. Mitsuha and Taki swap bodies and -sometimes over explicit objections- explore the physical aspects of these exchanges within the animated film. At the end they physically re-connected, in a different way, while in their own skin. No longer the same person. If a physical relationship develops from that re-encounter, I wouldn't mind seeing them touch each other with permission and for mutual enjoyment. After the clumsy fondling and glances from the beginning of the story, showing the pleasure of sex between lovers might well be a logical extension of the ending as told. Given, again, the physicality of early moments I'm curious why kissing is on your list? Racial conversion pops up again. How close to the original location would actors need to be born for their casting to be representative of the setting? Would they need to be raised right there to be able to do a role justice? Is it ok that Mone Kamishiraishi is not from that particular part of Japan as shown in the film? Does it matter that the aforementioned actress, also known as 北原 三枝, playing the role of 「ユミ」"Yumi" in the 1953 sequel film to 君の名は is not actually Ainu herself? Shinkai and his team went through several working titles before settling on this name 君の名は。for their 2016 film. A name with that well known baggage. I also find it confusing and often unnecessary to change titles, however. We somewhat agree on that aspect of the remake or adaptation process. Especially if the new film is otherwise a quite literal recreation of source material in other media or an earlier movie. Even today Japanese TV guides frequently list films with a "reinvented" Japanese title - titles which frequently seem to have very little to do with the actual title of the work and these are printed without providing the original title in the original language ... and that's while doing little more besides slicing scenes to accommodate splicing in commercials and adding a dub and/or subtitles to the foreign language material itself. In some Japanese subs and dubs a specific reference is also substituted for a generic term. |
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2017-09-29, 00:27 | Link #15 | |
Administrator
Join Date: Dec 2003
Age: 41
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I think it's okay to have a conversation about the changes Hollywood may make to adapt the source material for "American film-going audiences" and that could changing the diversity of the cast. But if we're going to have that conversation, I think it has to be without real or implied call-outs (and without inappropriate insinuations in the first place). I edited the original post to remove that point because I think it's inappropriately provocative and distracts from the actual conversation about the movie. So anyway, I'd just ask that the conversation not dwell on this issue, except if they want to have the broader conversation about racial diversity and casting for this movie.
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2017-09-29, 01:58 | Link #17 |
Secret Society BLANKET
Graphic Designer
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: 3 times the passion of normal flamenco
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I imagine they'll just take the basic premise of the story - the body-swapping between two teenagers separated by distance, and the supernatural occurrences with the comet - and then just make their own story around it.
As long as it's something like say an adaptation of All You Need Is Kill into Edge of Tomorrow, then it might become passable.
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Last edited by LoweGear; 2017-09-29 at 17:44. |
2017-09-29, 11:11 | Link #18 | |
Les Pays Bass
Join Date: Jun 2011
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2017-09-29, 15:00 | Link #20 |
Udon-YAAAAAAAA
Join Date: Jan 2008
Age: 35
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hollywood has always tried to adapt action movies though. aside from death note, which i have no idea what they were trying to do with that. something straight drama should be easier, which is why I think they should have done 5cm/s if anything.
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