'Bad Lieutenant' Is Getting a Rewrite
Filed under: Drama, Scripts, Remakes and Sequels
It has been 15 years since the release of Abel Ferrara's controversial film, Bad Lieutenant, but the LA Times reports that Producer Edward R. Pressman is looking to update the film by using, "...the raw material of the original film and weave it into 21st century, post- 9/11 New York". The original starred Harvey Keitel as the unnamed NY policeman, a drug and gambling addict who finds redemption while investigating the rape of a nun. The film was written by actress-model Zoë Tamerlis Lund and Abel Ferrara. The producers brought in Billy Finkelstein last year to rework the script, with the working title, Bad Lieutenant '08. Finkelstein has turned in scripts for a variety of crime TV; including Law and Order and NYPD Blue. Some the changes that Pressman and company have planned for the script are the addition of a back story of the lieutenant character, as well as finally giving their lead character a name: Terence McDonough. While the original was famous for shocking audiences with scenes of misogyny, drugs, violence, and all kinds of bad behavior, Finkelstein told the LA Times that, "I don't know that the same sorts of things that caused us to sit up and take notice 15 years ago are necessarily gonna have the same effect now." The man has a point, but it doesn't get much more disturbing than Harvey Keitel doing full-frontal nudity. Neither Keitel or Ferrara are attached to the film, but Pressman said that he has spoken to both of them about the update. So what do you think? Is Lieutenant due for an update? Or will this be just another in a long series of bad remake ideas?
[via Big Screen Little Screen]
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-06-2007 @ 7:34PM
Mr. R said...
All these remakes seem to be in favor of lightening things up, it's the same as the new Straw Dogs, it won't contain the heavy stuff, just the spinal cord. I don't think graphic violence should make up for a lack of substance in the script but I wonder if it's all about not bothering the conservative right. Some one please call Scorsese!
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9-06-2007 @ 8:47PM
Norm said...
Yeah, I agree. I'm getting the feeling this dizzying collection of remakes is a quick way for studios to get their product out with all the talk of a writers' strike (Are they still talking about that?)
After a while -- a short while -- it will soon feel like all these remakes and sequels are just being dumped on us, while directors like Rob Zombie or Rod Lurie can't wait to tell us what creative zest they've added to some remake. You wanna be creative? Why not try an original script.
Norm Schrager
www.meetinthelobby.com
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