The stars of The Magnificent Seven have defended the recent spate of Hollywood remakes, with actor Chris Pratt insisting it is a result of “merging business and art”.

Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke and their co-star Pratt walked the red carpet at the film’s world premiere on the opening night of the Toronto International Film Festival.

The trio star in a new version of the classic 1960 Western, which originally featured Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen, and which itself was a remake of the Japanese-language film Seven Samurai.

After a string of recent high-profile remakes or ‘reboots’, including Ghostbusters and Ben-Hur, Washington insisted revisiting a film that already existed was not why he chose the part.

“The remake part didn’t have anything to do with it,” he told the Press Association.

“It was a chance to be a cowboy in a movie that director Antoine Fuqua wanted to make. That’s what was interesting to me.”

Washington, 61, also confessed he had never watched the 1960 version of The Magnificent Seven, adding: “People would say, ‘oh, you’re the so-and-so character’, and I’d go, ‘I don’t even know who that is’.

“I think it allowed me to do whatever I wanted to do, instead of trying to not do what somebody else did.”

There’s never been a time when remakes haven’t been so popular

Pratt insisted the new version of The Magnificent Seven is a “reimagining of an older tale” and using the same title would bring a larger audience.

He said: “The reason remakes are so popular is because there are hundreds of thousands of movies that have been made. Even coming up with an original title is difficult.

“When you’re merging business and art, you need to find a way of reaching a wider audience.

“More people are going to come and see this movie because it’s called The Magnificent Seven but it’s a completely original reimagining of an older tale.

“I think you’ve got to get people in the audience, and that’s what we’re going to do, and then you’ve got to deliver them a fantastic movie, which is also what we do.”

Hawke, who previously co-starred with Washington in Oscar-winning film Training Day, said he believed remakes had “always been popular”.

“There’s never been a time they haven’t been popular,” he said.

“They’re always reviving Hamlet, Richard III and Julius Caesar, and they’re always reviving Dracula stories and bogeyman stories and zombie stories, they have done throughout time.

“Stories build on each other, music builds on the music before it.

“I don’t think it’s a good thing or a bad thing. I think it is what it is.”

Leonardo DiCaprio was expected at the festival yesterday with his environmental documentary Before the Flood, while Ewan McGregor was to attend the premiere of his directorial debut American Pastoral.

Double Oscar-winning director Oliver Stone will also present his latest film, Snowden, a biopic of NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

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