

- Sony Will Be Rebooting Spider-Man All Over Again in 2012! (135 Comments)
- 2010 Golden Globe Awards Winners - Avatar Wins Best Drama (97 Comments)
- Avatar Finally Passes Titanic as Highest Grossing Movie Ever (96 Comments)
- 82nd Academy Awards Nominees Are Officially Announced (96 Comments)
- Update: Spider-Man, Spider-Man, Does Whatever a Reboot Can (89 Comments)
- Watch This: First Official Trailer for Jon Foo's Tekken Movie (79 Comments)
- Rumor: Penélope Cruz Cast in Lars von Trier's Melancholia? (Feb 9, 2010)
- Rock Band Phoenix Scoring Sofia Coppola's Film Somewhere (Feb 9, 2010)
- Lionsgate's Saw Series Finally Ending at Saw VII This Year? (Feb 9, 2010)
- Casting Tidbits: Rachel Weisz, Cate Blanchett, Amber Tamblyn (Feb 9, 2010)
- The Cove's Mark Monroe to Make Formula One Documentary (Feb 9, 2010)
- Peter Bogdanovich Will Be Around for the 'Turn of the Century' (Feb 9, 2010)
Mike Nichols Remaking Akira Kurosawa's High and Low
October 29, 2008
by Alex Billington
Filmmaker Mike Nichols, of Closer and Charlie Wilson's War most recently, will direct a remake of Akira Kurosawa's High and Low, a 1963 detective thriller starring Toshiro Mifune. The script was written by David Mamet, who was originally commissioned by Martin Scorsese to write this remake back in 1999, but it took over two years for producer Scott Rudin to get all the rights they needed. Miramax is now finalizing the production details on this remake, although a start date hasn't been set just yet nor has casting begun. Although this is already a Kurosawa classic, it seems like the perfect story for a modern remake.
High and Low deals with a tough morality issue. Businessman Kingo Gondo learns that his son has been kidnapped and that the ransom demanded is near the amount that he has raised for a critical business deal. He is prepared to pay the ransom - that is, until he learns that the kidnappers have mistakenly abducted not his own son, but the child of his driver. Now he must decide whether the other man's child is equally worth saving. The story is actually based on Ed McBain's novel "King's Ransom" and sounds like a fascinating concept for a thriller. I'm actually very excited to see what Mamet and Nichols will do with this.
• ![]() |

Related Articles
- » Mike Nichols Directing an Adaptation of Highsmith's Deep Water
- » Worth Watching - Oct 11: Charlie Wilson's War Trailer
- » Leonardo DiCaprio Won't Star in Either Akira or Ninja Scroll
- » Live-Action Akira Project Still Alive, Fergus & Ostby Writing
- » Will Smith's Oldboy is Actually Based on the Graphic Novel
- » Rumor: Live-Action Remake of Akira in the Works?!
Reader Feedback - 9 Comments »
1
Imagine if Scorsese would have directed this, love his stuff, but I think Nichols did an excellent job with Charlie Wilson's War, and have high hopes for this one.
TBone on Oct 29, 2008
2
all i heard was mamet and i came.
Red Buttons on Oct 29, 2008
3
Mamet and Nichols! That sounds great. I hope they find a way to pay homage and modernize Kurosawa's story for today's audiences.
BahHumbug on Oct 29, 2008
4
This is so full of fail.
Do yourself a service, and watch the original High and Low. It is a great film, and entirely undeserving of a remake. The very idea of a "modern update" is, I think, preposterous. The reason being that timeless films are, in fact, timeless. Does Rashomon get old just because the period is different? What about The Seven Samurai? Do either of those films need "Modern updates"? Of course not.
I hope this project falls through.
Matthias Galvin on Oct 29, 2008
5
"…sounds like a fascinating concept for a thriller."
Then why not go and watch it? You don't have to wait the three years it will take for this remake to actually hit theatres.
Chris on Oct 29, 2008
6
Criterion Edition of High & Low!! I didn't know! …and here i am, proud of my crappy dvd import.
Anyway, Mike Nichols is great with actors, i would watch his remake.
Mario Tenorio on Oct 29, 2008
7
High and Low is my favorite Kurosawa film, and those who wait to see a remake (even if done by Nichols/Mamet, both of whom I very much like) will miss out on one of the greatest thrillers ever made.
Rahat on Oct 30, 2008
8
Another stale miss from our creatively bankrupt movie industry
—-furrrsurre!
DR DTX on Dec 2, 2009
9
It is foolish to remake an Akira Kurosawa's movie…
david on Dec 8, 2009




























