Front page of today's Calendar section of the LA Times:Undying Quirk 'Dark Shadows' reinterprets a favorite show from its director's and star's youths. As adults, they're having fun with it.See Reply #3123 for a link to the text of the article on the Times' blog,
But to me, DS wasn't like a theatrical epic; it was like the part of my family I never met--the people who were like ME (which nobody else in my real family ever was). To that extent, I like the publicists' angle about every family having its weirdies or however they're phrasing.If I walked into a room and saw somebody portraying my Aunt Lillian, and not only that, had the imposter who was supposed to be her running around in a crushed velvet cape with five hundred pounds of pancake makeup, it would be jarring and I wouldn't be able to "just get used to it." To me, DS is a cast of characters portrayed by Jonathan Frid, Grayson Hall, Joan Bennett et al. as they were 40 years ago.
I, for one, understand your point of view even though I don't have that same kind of investment in the original characters and story. If I have any emotional attachment to the original it is to the people I've met at festivals/conventions over the years and became friends with. Nothing will detract from my enjoyment of the original. But I don't have the kind of attachment or emotional investment in any of the characters that prevents me from watching a reworking of the original no matter how out there it may be. Obviously, not everyone feels the same way.
KLS is really annoyed over the piece and sent a letter to the editor. She posts extensively on her feelings regarding the article on her FB page.
I'm sort of jealous that you've already received your KLS book from Amazon because they didn't ship my copy until today and I supposedly won't receive it until Thursday. Though things often arrive before they tell me they will.
This movie will be nothing like the original series