Ask the Answer B!tch

She's here to help

Hello, you either have JavaScript turned off or an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.

Podcasts

Could Whitney Houston Have Been Saved?

  • And other great mysteries of Hollywood, beheaded for your pleasure in our weekly podcast!

Does Uggie the Dog Ever Have to Work Again?

  • And other great mysteries of Hollywood, beheaded for your pleasure in our weekly podcast!

Does Jim Carrey's Daughter Have an Edge on Idol?

  • And other great mysteries of Hollywood, beheaded for your pleasure in our weekly podcast!

Could Brad Pitt Wear Jeans and a T-shirt to the Oscars?

  • And other great mysteries of Hollywood, beheaded for your pleasure in our weekly podcast!
Got a query about how Hollywood works? Ask it!
Hello, you either have JavaScript turned off or an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.

A-List Secrets: How Hollywood Ruins Asian Horror

Famke Janssen, 100 Feet Voltage Pictures

Why are Hollywood remakes of Asian horror films not even half as scary or good as the originals?
—Alice

There's actually a sound and scientific reason why American remakes of successful Asian horror movies seem weak in their new forms. And it's not Jessica Alba.

After all, once you've seen a pasty dead girl crawling out of a TV, it's pretty tough to be spooked by her again, even if you have the attention span of a Pussycat Doll. However, not all Japanese-inspired American horror films are hopeless. A very promising one is on its way next month, and it features a sexy star whom geeks will love...

I speak of Famke Janssen, whose ghost film, 100 Feet, makes its U.S. debut at the Austin Film Festival next month. The reason many J-horror remakes don't work is because they replace creepy, homemade visual and sound effects with CG. (That's what happened in the U.S. remake of The Ring.) But in 100 Feet, which is inspired by Japanese horror, the main monster is played by a real actor, and the effects are done with minimal computer interference, making for a very believeable—and much more Japanese-y— experience.

"The handling of good Japanese-style horror films is very realistic, using 'in-camera' work rather than CGI," 100 Feet director Eric Red told me. "That's what made the original Ring and Jo-On work so well; the effects were very primitive and [there were] not a lot of special effects."

Right. That bone-breaking sound you got in the original Grudge? That was the director's voice, not a synth. Don't remember? Tune into my podcast. I'll do my Japanese ghost girl impression next week. Just for you.

Got a question about Hollywood? ASK IT!

Oh, and be my fan on Facebook, 'kay?

21 Comments

Now loading...

Add Your Comment!

Guests

E! Online members

Register | Forgot password?

Play nice and have fun. And please, no HTML tags or special characters including [&*#()!@$].
You've got 1000 characters left.

Post Comment