I have handled some of the Remington 1911s, but not shot them. I thought they looked well made to me. The way to know if you got a good semi-auto is to fire it. And keep firing it, and keep firing it. Have fun along the way!
I have to disagree with the gentleman who said there is no way to make a bad 1911. On the contrary, it is apparently pretty easy to foul up a proven design.
I sold a Gold Cup and bought a Kimber top-line stainless Gold Match a few years after they came out. It would work 9 round out of 10. Failure to feed. Bought Wilson 47Ds. Nothing would change that FTF. AND, Kimber (in my multiple experiences), has the WORST customer service of any gun maker. Just nasty. They never did get the gun to work, and shipping was on my dime. Had regional 1911 experts go over it. They couldn't solve it. The guess is that the breechface was incorrectly machined. I finally sold it to a home gunsmith who was sure he could make it work. Good luck.
My Dad had a budget priced Taurus 1911 stainless. It would shoot groups....around 12" offhand at 25 yards on the same day we'd shoot 2"-3" groups with other handguns. Never could get hold of Taurus for a repair. Maybe their 1911s are only for folks who shoot at 5 yards?
Hard to say.
Any company can make a bad product, it's how the CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT treats you that counts. S&W? I love them!

They have gone out of their way to make me happy in the past, and are usually a riot to talk with if you show some humor. In particular I remember Lenny and Frank, both of whom were awesome.
Springfield, Ruger and Colt (thanks Brent!) all have excellent customer service as well. I would recommend them to anyone.
Remington? I have no idea. I have never owned a Remington that ever needed work!
Now get off your computer and go burn some ammo Sir! Be safe out there. Best wishes, Marc