Sam Raimi producing a reboot to The Grudge, 10 years after the last remake

JoBloJoBlo
Last Updated on August 2, 2021

Before the current found footage craze, the big horror focus was on remaking Japanese horror films. In the wake of THE RING, we got a number of lackluster films capitalizing on the creepy ghosts that populated asian horror films. The most successful of those movies was THE GRUDGE starring Sarah Michelle Gellar. After several sequels failed to capitalize on the first movie’s almost $200 million box office worldwide, producer Sam Raimi is going to try remaking it again.

Raimi and partner Rob Tapert will produce again via Ghost House Pictures with MIDNIGHT MEAT TRAIN screenwriter Jeff Buhler working on a draft. It remains to be seen if the film will retell the same story as the Japanese and American films or take the same basic structure and tell a brand new story.

THE GRUDGE describes a curse that is born when someone dies in the grip of a powerful rage or extreme sorrow. The curse is an entity created where the person died. Those who encounter this evil supernatural force die and the curse is reborn repeatedly, passed from victim to victim in an endless, growing chain of horror.

JU-ON: THE GRUDGE generated six feature film installments while the English-language version produced a trilogy. It seems apparent that this new film is aiming for a theatrical release versus a direct to home video project, but with the films costing almost no money to make, the studio stands to make a hefty profit even if the new film does half the business of the first.

THE GRUDGE remake has no set release date, but with how quickly these can get made, it could still conceivably be released this year.

Source: Deadline

About the Author

TV Critic / Columnist
6,337 Articles Published Started writing in 2012

Favorite Movies: Being There, The Shining, The Royal Tenenbaums, Suspiria, Seven, North By read more Northwest, Citizen Kane, The Monster Squad, Begotten, Fight Club, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Army of Darkness, Children of Men, Blade Runner, The Big Lebowski, Casino, Pi, Dumb and Dumber, The 400 Blows, Small Change, Bonnie & Clyde, Cool Hand Luke, Moulin Rouge, Gangs of New York, Shallow Grave, The Rock, The Incredibles, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, The Gate, Prince of Darkness, Oldboy, The Dark Knight, The Lord of the Rings, The Tree of Life, The Exorcist III, Midnight Special

Likes: To piss you off, unpopular opinions, the novels of Stephen King, read more obscure bands that even hipsters dont know, things that go boom, Reeses Pieces, Cate Blanchett, reading paper books, watching people falling down, a good jump scare, listening to a full album in one sitting, rooting for the underdog, red band trailers, rare steaks, cool beer labels, smooth whisky, properly proportioned image files, top ten lists, VHS tapes, and actually scary movies

The comment section exists to allow readers to discuss the article constructively and respectfully, focused on the topic at hand.

What’s Not Allowed

  • Abusive language, insults, or harassment toward other users or staff.
  • Hate speech of any kind is strictly prohibited.
  • Bickering, bullying, personal attacks, or baiting others to argue
  • Extended off-topic debates, especially those centered on politics or religion rather than the article topic
  • No AI content or SPAM