Yeah, but it was 1902. People were impressed with moving pictures in general back then, regardless of what it was. For fuck's sake, they were experimenting with a brand new medium. You can't apply that to the films of today.
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Well, yeah, but that's half the point of someone wanting to remake a movie, right? To say, "Yeah, I fucking loved this, I want to show it to the current generation so they can feel the same way I did".
Or that's what a decent filmmaker does, at least.
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So where does the
Nightmare on Elm Street remake stand in all of this?