Did I read this correctly? Pee-Wee Herman wants to remake Dark Shadows after Depp's movie?
Quote from: jimbo on October 23, 2011, 03:09:42 PMDid I read this correctly? Pee-Wee Herman wants to remake Dark Shadows after Depp's movie?For some reason it took forever to get the video to play. But it strikes me as if he was just joking - particularly when his remarks about DS are in reply to the interviewer saying he would have loved to have seen him be in Burton's DS. But even if Pee Wee would like to do his own version, there's one big obstacle in the way: Depp holds the rights to DS. So, neither Pee Wee nor anyone else would be able to do a DS film as long as that's the case. And who knows when Depp's rights expire? If there really is hope of doing a DS franchise, the rights can't expire anytime soon.200 days 11 hours 54 minutes 25 seconds until the day the Depp/Burton Dark Shadows is released(ET)!!
A fan asked Danny if the original score would be in Tim's version. Danny's answer was no for the simple fact he believes Elfman (I think he meant Burton) wants to make his imagining of Dark Shadows his own. Elfman said that for Batman and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Burton was pretty adamant about making the music original.
I see they added JP as a consultant at the DS imdb but that may have been there for a while and it was a given in any event.
this is from the article "Johnny Depp to Portray the Angst-Ridden Vampire Barnabas Collins?" at http://mpimedia.com/wp/?p=19 --QuoteProducer Jim Pierson of Dan Curtis Productions and MPI Media Group will serve as a consultant on the project.
Producer Jim Pierson of Dan Curtis Productions and MPI Media Group will serve as a consultant on the project.
As for Bob Cobert's music being used or being adapted for the film, I could be forgetting a remark, but I only recall Pierson and places like ShadowGram saying that the main theme would appear in some form, not that any other Cobert compositions would be used. So in that sense it would seem that it hasn't been the intention to use Cobert's score but simply to adapt one piece of his music.