'' remake A
film remake uses an earlier film as its main source material, rather than returning to the earlier film's source material. The 2001 film ''
Ocean's Eleven'' is a remake of 1960's ''
Ocean's 11'', while 1989's
Batman is a re-interpretation of the comic book source material which also inspired 1966's
Batman. In 1998,
Gus Van Sant produced an
almost shot-for-shot remake of
Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 film
Psycho. The 2025 film
Snow White is a
live-action remake of the
animated 1937 film
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. With the exception of
shot-for-shot remakes, most remakes make significant changes in character, plot, genre, and theme. For example, the 1968 film
The Thomas Crown Affair is centered on a bank robbery, while its
1999 remake involves the theft of a valuable painting. The 1999 remake of
The Mummy was viewed primarily as a "reimagining" in a different genre (adventure). Similarly, when the 1969 film
The Italian Job was
remade in 2003, few aspects were carried over. Another example is the 1932 film
Scarface which was
remade in 1983 starring
Al Pacino; the 1932 version is about the illegal alcohol trade, while the characters in the 1983 version are cocaine smugglers. Sometimes a remake is made by the same director. For example,
Yasujirō Ozu's black-and-white
A Story of Floating Weeds was remade into the color
Floating Weeds. Hitchcock remade his 1934 black-and-white
The Man Who Knew Too Much in color
in 1956.
Tick Tock Tuckered, released in 1944, was a color remake of ''
Porky's Badtime Story'', released in 1937 with
Daffy Duck in
Gabby Goat's role.
Cecil B. DeMille managed the same thing with his
1956 remake of his silent 1923 film
The Ten Commandments.
Sam Raimi directed
Evil Dead II in 1987, a quasi-remake of his 1981 film
The Evil Dead, blending original elements with an emphasis on comedy. In 2007,
Michael Haneke' remake
Funny Games, was an
English-language remake of his original
German-language Funny Games (which is also an example of a shot-for-shot remake), while
Martin Campbell, director of the miniseries
Edge of Darkness, directed the
2010 film adaptation. Not all remakes use the same title as the previously released version; the 1966 film ''
Walk, Don't Run, for example, is a remake of the World War II comedy The More the Merrier. This is particularly true for films that are remade from films produced in another language such as Point of No Return (from the French La Femme Nikita), Vanilla Sky (from the Spanish Abre los ojos), The Magnificent Seven (from the Japanese Seven Samurai), A Fistful of Dollars (from the Japanese Yojimbo), The Departed'' (from Hong Kong's
Infernal Affairs),
Secret in Their Eyes (from the Argentine
El secreto de sus ojos),
Let Me In (from the Swedish
Let the Right One In or ''
), and The Ring (from the Japanese Ring)''. Remakes are rarely sequels to the original film. In this situation, essentially the remake repeats the same basic story of the original film and may even use the same title, but also contains notable plot and storyline elements indicating the two films are set in "the same universe". An example of this type of remake is the 2000 film version of
Shaft, which was the second film adaptation of the
original novel but was also a canon storyline sequel to the
original 1971 film adaptation. The 2013 remake of
Evil Dead was also a storyline sequel, featuring a post-credits cameo from
Ash Williams. The Italian film
Perfect Strangers (''''; 2016) was included in the
Guinness World Records as it became the most remade film in cinema history, with a total of 18 versions of the film. ==Television==