Didn't they already do that in the 1940s?I seem to recall reading somewhere that Universal was planning on a shared universe for all of their monster/horror properties.
This.I assume the OP meant cinematic universes in the sense of either two or more concurrent linked film series, à la MCU, or one movie series plus consistent spin-off outputs, à la upcoming Star Wars slate. So X-Men is currently a movie "universe", because you've got the regular X-films plus solo Gambit and Deadpool movies coming, but Fast & Furious and Mission: Impossible are not, because they're singular series.
So, to answer the question, the MCU, Star Wars, and DCCU all seem like safe bets for the near future. The X-Men main series is also likely to stick around, but we'll see if the first two non-Wolverine solo movies prove to have legs, and we'll also see if this male Ghostbusters movie comes together at all.
Additionally, Valiant Comics has secured a nine-figure (hundreds of millions) investment for producing an initial slate of presumably linked movies, much like Marvel Studios did before their Disney acquisition.
So, for those of us keeping score, this makes for the following extant and possible sci-fi/fantasy cinematic universes:
1. MCU
2. Star Wars
3. DCCU
4. X-Men
5. Ghostbusters
6. Valiant Comics
So the answer to the question is "as many as are good."
I know there are Star Wars comics, but Star Wars isn't really a Marvel comics film.
1. MCU
2. Star Wars
3. DCCU
4. X-Men
5. Ghostbusters
6. Universal Horror
7. Valiant Comics
They should just do original stuff or pick a new franchise.I am curious what Universal does with its Monsters. Truth is the actual characters are in the public domain. So anyone could do a shared monster universe or crossover. Its done all the time. Look at something like Monster Squad.
To make it their own their own they should really use the iconic style of their old films from the 30s and 40s. Otherwise what makes it a "Universal Dracula" or "Universal Frankenstein" more than any of the dozens that have been made over the years by other studios?
So the answer to the question is "as many as are good."
Yes, anybody could, but it's not necessarily a gold mine. It's not as though Dracula Untold shattered expectations.I am curious what Universal does with its Monsters. Truth is the actual characters are in the public domain. So anyone could do a shared monster universe or crossover. Its done all the time. Look at something like Monster Squad.
So the answer to the question is "as many as are good."
Actually, "more than are..."
I know there are Star Wars comics, but Star Wars isn't really a Marvel comics film.
True, but Disney does own both properties.
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