MovieChat Forums > West Side Story (1961) Discussion > Spielberg isn't the one to remake it.

Spielberg isn't the one to remake it.


I honestly can't really see the need to remake this movie, but nothing's safe anymore. However, having Spielberg and Kushner, 69 and 59, respectively in charge of this makes little sense to me. Great remakes reinvent the original. Spielberg and Kushner are too old and too typical to take on this project and would only give a pale recreation of the original. Someone like a Ryan Coogler would maybe be a good choice to handle a modern day update of this story, with the life experience and youth to boot. I've also long heard people say Michael Bay should direct this. I can't say I agree with that, but at least I feel like Bay would be more likely to give a WSS remake a reason to exist than Spielberg.

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Frankly, I don't think that anybody should re-make West Side Story, because it's such an iconic classic that's in a special class all by itself. Some classics should not be touched, and West Side Story is most definitely one of them.

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I don't think there's any reason to remake it either, but if they are going to do it, I don't think Spielberg is the choice.

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Frankly (I've said this already, but it bears repeating here!), I don't think anybody should even think of tampering with and messing with a classic such as West Side Story. Moreover, I sincerely hope they pull the plug on the idea of a re-make of the film West Side Story altogether!

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THANK YOU! I do not understand the obsession with remaking iconic performances with efforts that look amateurish in comparison.

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Spielberg is definitely not the one to re-make West Side Story, but why should anybody be the one to make this film?!?

Nobody should, as far as i'm concerned. A Classic such as West Side Story is what it is, and should be left alone...period!

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First thing, i don't view it as a "remake", but more as just another attempt at adaptation of the stage play, for the play was just basically R&J in West side NY.

That said, this really doesn't need to happen now. At all. For one thing, WSS is already timeless enough to last into the 21st century and beyond. 2nd of all, Broadway theatrics were a lot more palatable for audiences back then, so doing it now would come across as forced to some,,even though, IMO, WSS '61 holds up 100%, even despite Natalie Wood's shaky accent. 3rd, Jerome Robbins, sadly is no longer with us. His work for the stage play, AND the movie are groundbreaking, further cementing dance as a true art form for cinema. Whoever they pick to choreograph this(if this even happens in the first place), would be lucky to be 1/100 as talented as Jerome Robbins.

Luckily, I think it's a dead in the water project, for the most part

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Note: it might seem like I contradicted myself with my second point, so lemme clarify by saying "general movie audiences", because obviously WSS is still popular with Broadway audiences

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Hi, Krishthegod!

Thank you for some great points that are well taken. West Side Story, however, isn't something that I'd go so far as to call a modern-day or "hip" version of Romeo and Juliet that's set in NYC's west Side. The themes are basically the same, but the following differences between Romeo and Juliet and West Side Story are far too striking to consider WSS a modern-day Romeo & Juliet.

A) Maria, unlike Juliet, doesn't die.

B) Unlike Romeo & Juliet, West Side Story is a musical

C) West Side Story has more modern speech than Romeo and Juliet.


Yet, one could agree that the following similarities between WSS and Romeo & Juliet exist, as well:

A) They both take place in urban areas.

B) People from two different cultures/factions/families meet and fall in love.

C) Hatred between the two sides result in tragedy and death, but reconciliation in the end, in the wake of tragedy.

West Side Story remains timeless due to the subject matter, as well as the beautifully choreographed dancing by Jerome Robbins, the cinematography, the intensely brilliant Leonard Bernstein musical score, and the very story behind it, plus these qualities are what make West Side Story successful both on stage and on screen. Here's another quality about West Side Story that I've pointed out on other posts, but bears repeating here: WSS is a fantastic work of art, which was also kept as a larger-than-life-sized piece of theatre when it was transferred from stage to screen, which is another thing that gives this film its strength. Some of the settings of the film version of WSS, which were designed by the late Boris Leven, look uncannily like parts of a rough-and-run-down area of a huge city, and the costumes were terrific.

Having written the above paragraph, I believe that these are the reasons that many, many people (myself included.) tend to overlook Natalie Wood's shaky accent, the dubbing of the two leads by Marnie Nixon (for Natalie Wood's Maria) and Jimmy Bryant (for Richard Beymer's Tony), as well as the outdated dialogue and slang.

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Many literature experts disagree with your opinion on whether or not WSS is a 'version' of the R&J story. In fact, in the late 70s, they were taught in tandem in many high schools - the books issued to students were the 'back to back' version held one one way, it was Shakespeare's R&J; flip it over and it was WSS.

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Many literature experts disagree with your opinion on whether or not WSS is a 'version' of the R&J story. In fact, in the late 70s, they were taught in tandem in many high schools - the books issued to students were the 'back to back' version held one one way, it was Shakespeare's R&J; flip it over and it was WSS.

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I remember first seeing that particular book, back in the early 1970's, in a now-defunct bookstore. It was interesting, but West Side Story is the play that I liked best.

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I, too, think it's senseless to recreate this classic film. I know there was (or still is) an updated bilingual version with the Puerto Ricans speaking Spanish. If it is being remade as a film and they try the same thing, at least they can subtitle it. But I hate the thought of a remake, period.

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You're absolutely spot-on, scarletetsdad! Re-making this great, golden oldie-but-goodie classic film (i. e. West Side Story) would simply cut the heart and soul right out of it! A re-make of West Side Story as a film would be a totally fiasco.

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