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Nightmare on elm street trilogy
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"Time to nut up or shut up"-Tallahassee
http://ultimatewarriorcollection.webs.com/
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In the original, they felt like they were already pushing the boundaries already, so the dialogue referred to him as a child killer. Although I think it was very obvious given all the weirdly sexually suggestive dream imagery they used throughout the movies... from the tongue in the telephone to Freddy turning into a snake or the "jaws" claws between her legs in the bathtub.
In the remake they came out and stated it at the end IIRC. They at least introduced an interesting element of ambiguity in the build-up to the climax for those that were not familiar with the originals... Did He or Didn't He?Comment
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The first one was great. Dream Warriors is the only sequel that can touch it, IMO. Those two are my favorites -- but I liked Part 2 well enough. I thought the whole gay subtext in the second one was kind of interesting, considering it was such a teen-centered, mainstream horror flick. (The screenwriter said it was intentional, the director claims he didn't even notice.)
The others have their moments but I can take 'em or leave 'em. (New Nightmare was kinda cool, though.)
Haven't seen the remake yet.Last edited by Sandman9580; Aug 10, '11, 10:41 PM.Comment
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Nightmare was a great franchise I liked all of the original films with Englund in them.
The remake was okay but it just wasn't freddy for me.“When you say “It’s hard”, it actually means “I’m not strong enough to fight for it”. Stop saying its hard. Think positive!”Comment
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"Time to nut up or shut up"-Tallahassee
http://ultimatewarriorcollection.webs.com/
My stuff on facebook Incompatible Browser | Facebook
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They appear to have added Freddy to a recent version of one of the Mortal Kombat gamesComment
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I feel the same Englund was just hilarious even on the crappy tv series.The new Freddy is just not funny and the make up, although realistic looking just isn't freddy.
But the movie was okay and I would like to see more.“When you say “It’s hard”, it actually means “I’m not strong enough to fight for it”. Stop saying its hard. Think positive!”Comment
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great podcast about Night on Elm Street, including an interview with Heather Langenkemp (sp?)
Retroist Podcast A Nightmare on Elm Street | The Retroist
Last edited by samurainoir; Aug 13, '11, 6:03 PM.Comment
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Hmmmm....
I think it’s safe to call the first one a good movie: it had some pretty imaginative stuff, and was technically proficient. Some of the others were entertaining, but I don’t know if I’d call ‘em “good.” They tended to rely on the same schtick too much, and the kids would wimp out at odd times just to move the story along. But they were fun; Freddy was SUCH a jerk....
(As an aside: I always wanted to see Freddy go after a kid who was crazier than he was.... a kid that’d kick Freddy out of his own world and end up doing MORE damage than the Krugester; forcing Freddy into a sort of hero role.)
The new flick was a strange bit of film. If you’re familiar with the story, or have seen the original then the new one probably won’t impress you. It’s an hour of buildup to a twist you already know. If it was your first encounter with the story, I could see enjoying it, since it’s essentially the first film again.
A confounding bit would be for oldsters like us: like every slasher film since the 60's, the kids are archetypes.... disposable ciphers meant to be cut down like wheat. The film makers have very little time to introduce the “characters.” Visual cues are the easiest and most expedite method, but if you’re over 30 you’ll have a helluva time identifying the archetypes these kids fall under, given the shifts in fashion over the decades. (So.... the “Blink 182" lookin’ kid is the TOUGH one?!?!?)
I noticed a similar phenomenon years ago, during a prolonged bout of 50's delinquent films. As someone born in 1970 I had a tough time identifying which were the “good” kids, and which the “bad.” After way too many films, I developed the knack.... but the differences are subtle.
The weakest point of the new Nightmare film is Freddy.... he’s creepier than the original, but not as entertaining since they toned his sarcasm down. It’s a tradeoff that didn’t ruin things for me, but did take some getting used to.
Don C.Comment
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I look forward to seeing the remake, just as a curiosity. Freddy terrified me as a kid -- so the comedic direction they eventually went in leaves me cold. To me, Freddy should be scary.Comment
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