Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Podcast

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Photo Gallery: The Concerts at the 2026 ESSENCE Festival Of Culture® Presented By Coca-Cola®

Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

Ownership over Access: Several Key Takeaways from the Greensboro Business League Executive Round Table

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
The Windy City Word
  • Home
  • News
    1. Local
    2. View All

    Uncle Remus Says Similar Restaurant Name Is Diluting Its Brand and Misleading Customers

    Youth curfew vote stalled in Chicago City Council’s public safety committee

    Organizers, CBA Coalition pushback on proposed luxury hotel near Obama Presidential Center

    New petition calls for state oversight and new leadership at Roseland Community Hospital

    Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

    Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

    Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

    Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

  • Opinion

    Rep Davis, Olive Post CDR., Call on Trump to Restore file of Black Vietnam War Hero to Website

    Capitalize on Slower Car Dealership Sales in 2025

    The High Cost Of Wealth Worship

    What Every Black Child Needs in the World

    Changing the Game: Westside Mom Shares Bally’s Job Experience with Son

  • Business

    Illinois Department of Innovation & Technology supplier diversity office to host procurement webinar for vendors

    Crusader Publisher host Ukrainian Tech Businessmen eyeing Gary investment

    Sims applauds $220,000 in local Back to Business grants

    New Hire360 partnership to support diversity in local trades

    Taking your small business to the next level

  • Health

    Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

    Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

    Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

    Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

    The Imported Doctors

  • Education

    Black Teens Lead in AI Use for Schoolwork. but at What Cost?

    COMMENTARY: Day After the Fireworks: Inaugural Martyrs Day Asks What Freedom Cost — and Who Paid

    Reading the Nation at 250: Who Is Missing from the Story?

    Nurture, Inc., Negro Southern League Museum Look to Preserve History While Healing the Community

    Military Child Care, a National Model, Faces Limitations

  • Sports

    Houston Texans’ Brandon Codrington Returns Home to Inspire Young Athletes at Free Youth Football Camp

    What the Supreme Court’s Trans Sports Ruling Means

    Photo Gallery: FIFA Fan Festival keeps drawing massive crowds in Atlanta

    Isaac Cook: A Local High School Standout to Watch

    Photo Gallery: The FIFA World Cup 2026™ Vibes are in Atlanta!

  • Podcast
The Windy City Word
News

Not just another remake

staffBy staffUpdated:No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Remakes, prequels, reboots, sequels, requels, and the like constitute the majority of what we watch these days. Seems like reimagining what’s been done (and redone) is the first impulse of filmmakers, or, more likely, their financiers. When I see a “new” old thing advertised, my first impulse is to avoid it. Happily, there are exceptions. When Olivier Assayas (Summer Hours, Non-Fiction, Carlos) wants to remake his own 26-year-old film, which itself is a meta riff on a 1916 Louis Feuillade serial, I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt.

Feuillade’s Les vampires: Satanas casts a long shadow. Critically reviled in its time, it has since been recognized as a founding template for the thriller genre that persists to this day. I rewatched all ten episodes a few months ago without knowing about Assayas’s new HBO series. It’s a pure joy to watch the journalist/sleuth Guérande, aided by his enemy-turned-friend, Mazamette, chase after a diabolical criminal gang called the Vampires. The plot twists, stunts, and lack of moralizing combine for a formula that’s been applied to so many movies, TV shows, books, and comics that it feels eternal.

In Assayas’s 1996 film, Hong Kong star Maggie Cheung plays a semifictional version of herself in Paris to star in a new take on Les vampires, under the unsteady direction of French auteur René Vidal (Jean-Pierre Léaud). This is not in any way a remake of the 1916 film, but rather a meditation on the then-current state of French cinema. The shoot is a disastrous comedy of errors and Cheung’s bemused outsider is a great stand-in for the viewer, observing a group of nutty, self-absorbed artistes sabotage themselves both personally and professionally. It’s a portrait of a once-inspired scene eating itself. By setting Feuillade’s classic at its center, Assayas shows how far French cinema has fallen.

Irma Vep
TV-MA
Eight 50-60-minute episodes
Now streaming on HBO Max

Now, Assayas reconsiders his own take, albeit on a much wider canvas, in an entirely different media landscape. This new Irma Vep, with the Swedish actress Alicia Vikander assuming Cheung’s lead role and co-producing, allows a great filmmaker to look back as well as forward—to look at where cinema has been and whether it has anywhere else to go. 

Key characters from the 1996 film reappear, but now with much more complex backstories and labyrinthine, messy connections to one another. Vikander’s Mira Harberg is an American action star yearning for a creative legitimacy that no one around wants to allow her. She’s a cash cow and lust object to actors, directors, producers, and assistants, forever being played by this or that one in proxy skirmishes over love and commerce. Vikander keeps Mira buoyant no matter what obstacles those around her throw her way. It’s an affecting performance in its seeming casualness. She makes it look easy when there’s no way it could be, either for the actress or for the actress she plays.

Assayas seamlessly interpolates sequences from the 1916 film with scenes from the current remake, backstage “off-camera” action, as well as dreamlike clips of Cheung from the 1996 version. Now René Vidal (played as a shambling mess ever on the verge of complete breakdown by Vincent Macaigne), is a kind of stand-in for Assayas. He hallucinates the star of the 1996 film, a barely-fictionalized Chinese actress named Jade (Assayas was married to Cheung for a time), haunting his set and preventing him from moving on creatively and personally. Then, as if there weren’t enough levels and layers, due to the crew objecting to a sequence recreating a sexual assault from the original film, Feuillade and Musidora (the first Irma Vep) make their appearance to state their artistic intentions from the distant past.

Each time period is shot in its own format from handheld documentary, to Masterpiece Theatre-like stuffy costume drama, to experimental scratchiness, to a hand-tinted dawn-of-photography look. All the while, the question of whether movies have any future in the age of TikTok is the burning, perhaps unresolvable undercurrent. So many of these people are cinephiles, yet they keep watching rushes as well as clips from all eras of film on their smartphones. With over a hundred years of the moving image at their disposal, these creative people appear at a loss how to proceed. It’s a very familiar feeling.

I’ve seen six of the eight scheduled episodes of Assayas’s show and it gets deeper and funnier as it goes. Structured to roughly resemble Feuillade’s ten-episode structure, I don’t know how he will wrap it all up, but I look forward to finding out. Perhaps he can revisit this world in another ten or 20 years. But will there even be movies or TV shows as we know and love them by then? Please stand by.


Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.


Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleThe ‘new normal’ hangs over another summer of live music
Next Article Judge Lisa Holder White sworn in to Illinois Supreme Court, becomes first Black female justice
staff

Related Posts

Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxFXtgzTu4U
Advertisement
Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjfvYnUXHuI
ABOUT US

 

The Windy City Word is a weekly newspaper that projects a positive image of the community it serves. It reflects life on the Greater West Side as seen by the people who live and work here.

OUR PICKS

Conquer Any Trail This Truck’s Off-Road Tech is INSANE! #shorts

2 Minute Warning – Human Trafficking Series • Powered by the Westside Gazette

LIVE! — HE SAID, HE SAID, HE SAID,: APRIL FOR ARTS 2025 W/ LAWRENCE PERRY — FRI. 4.18.25 7PM EST

MOST POPULAR

Black Maternal Health: a 360-Degree Look at Black Midwives

Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

Clayco Invests in Men’s Mental Health

© 2026 The Windy City Word. Site Designed by No Regret Medai.
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.