Unfortunately they seem to just not get it when it comes to capturing the feel of some of the better asian films.
Even worse, they seem prone to copping the visual style with little of the subtext, or even trying to tease out new subtext by relocating the action to another culture. DARK WATER comes to mind, particularly how much more resonant - and sad - the central and ongoing indignity suffered by the mother was in the Japanese original when you view it in context of a patriarchal society that hasn’t often used the media to examine the plight of divorced, single mothers, themselves a more recently acknowledged and de-stigamtized concept in many Asian cultures than they are in the west.
In North America, the United States in particular, the rule rather than the exception seems to be movies in any genre that feature ruptured families, single dads, single moms, etc, whether they’re played for laughs, drama, horror, etc, and all in the service of providing lazy screenwriters with the pre-cut pieces needed to wrap up just about any story with the re-establishing of the family unit - in one form or another - in the final act.
In western media culture, where such a dysfunctional dynamic has been presented as the norm, or at least an acceptable alternative to the traditional family unit, for the better part of a quarter century (as well it should, I say!), a film like Walter Salle’s DARK WATER loses much of its potential punch because the central characters are simply too familiar from countless other movies. To see these issues dealt with from the perspective of filmmakers from another country makes for fascinating viewing.
I’m really curious to see the remakes of INFERNAL AFFAIRS and OLDBOY as well, the latter if only to see if they’ve got the stones to keep the Big Twist (and its attendant precursory sex scenes) intact. But my expectations for both are low, despite the talent involved.
To date I’ve been no more impressed with the remakes of Asian films any more than I was with the late-80’s/early 90’s cycle of remakes of Euro comedies that quickly played itself out, but that's just me, of course. THE RING remake completely blew its Big Finale with pointless visual trickery, THE GRUDGE pointlessly cast Big American Names which automatically forced audience preconceptions into play where the original, even to Japanese audiences, was not so keen to trade on Star Power (at least the remake retained the Japanese setting to some positive effect). DARK WATER, despite my comments above, did find at least
some new subtext inherent in the concept (namely by casting the same actress as the ghost AND the young version of the lead character in flashbacks), but dialed down the sense of dread and suspense to the point of inertia, ending with an anti-climactic “reveal” that couldn’t match the brilliant construction of the same sequence in the original. And the American Ring 2? Well, that was basically a remake of DARK WATER too, so ‘nuff said.
Still waiting for them to start trotting out the remakes of all those Korean comedies they snatched up the rights to over the last few years (MY SASSY GIRL, MY WIFE IS A GANGSTER, HI DHARMA, and others).