I have quite the love/hate relationship with Nicolas Cage, and honestly my use of the phrase, "But he was in Adaptation! Playing twins!" can no longer justify his work in Next, Ghost Rider, The Wicker Man, et al.
I ran across the trailer for his next film, Bangkok Dangerous, an English-language remake of a 1999 Thai film of the same name, both directed by the Pang brothers of Hong Kong cinema fame. They made the original The Eye, most recently butchered in the States by one Jessica Alba.
No surprises in the plot. Hitman goes to Bangkok, has an existential crisis about his work and goes head to head with corrupt Thai government officials and slimy underworld figures. And of course, he finds the love of a good-hearted native woman (though I don't think she appears as a sushi waitress—ZING!) who teaches him that there are, indeed, at least a few decent folks in Asia.
There has undoubtedly been a boom in American remakes of
Asian movies, many of which I think are wholly unnecessary. I think most
remakes are futile. If the film was so great in the first place, why redo it?
They should remake horrible movies so that they're actually tolerable upon second viewing; we can
start with all of Vin Diesel's films, post-Saving Private Ryan.
But why is the remake, particularly of Asian films, so popular? And why, even with some Asian directors still at the helm, do the protagonists almost always go from yellow to white? Gang Gary Xu, assistant professor of Chinese, Comparative Literature and Cinema Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, discusses that very issue in an article for Senses of Cinema. Xu writes, "Cinema consumption used to follow a unidirectional trail of popularity: whatever proved successful in North America would surely be welcomed in East Asia as long as those countries open their markets to Hollywood. Now, thanks to transnationalism, the trail has traffic from both ways: whatever proved successful in East Asia would most likely succeed in North America as long as the original ethnicity is changed to that of Caucasian."
So will Nic Cage's Caucasian face sell this movie to America? My theory is, if you can sell National Treasure, you can sell pretty much anything. But hey, Bangkok Dangerous 2008 isn’t a complete rehash of the original. In the Thai version, the protagonist was deaf and mute. If only we were so lucky this go around…
Bangkok Dangerous opens
this August.
This blog entry is graciously sponsored by Toyota Matrix, check out
their website devoted to the best in Asian American film.

Posted by sylvie at April 7, 2008 12:03 PM
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is it true that nic cage is also going to be starring in the remake of old boy? please someone say no. old boy does not need a remake!
last i heard, the oldboy remake plans were dropped. i think justin lin was supposed to direct. i don't think anyone should try to redo a chan wook park film. the man's way too complex.
i agree. speaking of remakes, did everyone see the trailer that leaked for my sassy girl? oh my god. i wanted to strangle myself when i was watching it. why?! whyyy...