In the Oz franchise, Baum left it completely ambiguous (whether by design or more likely not) whether he was writing fairy tales (i.e., the events are "real" within their own context) or dream fantasy (i.e., the events are nothing more than the dreams of the protagonist), for the first five books; then, in The Emerald City of Oz, by having Aunt Em and Uncle Henry join Dorothy in Oz, with the three of them becoming permanent residents, he finally came down on the side of "Oz is a series of fairy tales."
Conversely, I argue that the Abramsverse is not a true reboot because it doesn't disregard the Prime Universe, but instead has an in-universe explanation in which Prime Universe events are what ultimately lead to the branching off of the Abramsverse. And it is precisely because it doesn't completely disregard the Prime Universe that I even find it tolerable.
You're not the boss of me, Mack! I'm going to pass out from lack of oxygen!! That'll show you!!!
And, of course, let's never forget several headcases on various Planet of the Apes websites/listservs who keep insisting to this very day that the Roddy McDowall originals, the '70s live-action series, the '70s animated series, the Marvel Comics series, the 2001 Tim Burton remake, and the current Andy Serkis movies are all somehow interconnected, and part of a single continuity.Another example: Batman Begins is a reboot, because it started the series over from the scratch, ignoring the previous cycle of movies, the Adam West TV series, etc.
Although I've occasionally encountered people who thought that Batman Begins was supposed to be a prequel to the 1989 Tim Burton movie, even though that makes no sense and certainly doesn't hold up to examination.
The Daniel Craig films haven't really been much more of a "reboot" than any other Bond recastings over the years. The films do have a different format, with there being tighter continuity between them than Bond movies typically share, but that's about it. Besides, I have a suspicion that the next movie will be a similar style of "reboot" severing ties to Craig's continuity.I have precisely zero interest in the post-reboot Bond films
Ever seen this meme featuring Kirk's crew time-traveling to this decade and the locals laughing at their "outdated cellphones"?While I like the Kelvin Timeline (as it's now called) well enough, I'd actually prefer a wholesale reboot. There's a half-century of continuity baggage and outdated ideas loaded into Trek canon, and reinventing it only halfway doesn't really free you from those limits. For instance, most of J.J. Abrams's works are very female-centric (Felicity, Alias, Undercovers, Fringe, The Force Awakens), and yet here we're still saddled with the same old six-men-and-one-woman setup as the old show. With a full reboot unconnected to prior continuity, the cast could've been modernized and diversified more. Plus it would've been free of the problematical need to assume that the Eugenics Wars happened in the 1990s, and so on. It could've been a completely fresh start, and that could've been very exciting and liberating.
The Daniel Craig films haven't really been much more of a "reboot" than any other Bond recastings over the years. The films do have a different format, with there being tighter continuity between them than Bond movies typically share, but that's about it. Besides, I have a suspicion that the next movie will be a similar style of "reboot" severing ties to Craig's continuity.
And, of course, let's never forget several headcases on various Planet of the Apes websites/listservs who keep insisting to this very day that the Roddy McDowall originals, the '70s live-action series, the '70s animated series, the Marvel Comics series, the 2001 Tim Burton remake, and the current Andy Serkis movies are all somehow interconnected, and part of a single continuity.
Another example: Batman Begins is a reboot, because it started the series over from the scratch, ignoring the previous cycle of movies, the Adam West TV series, etc.
Although I've occasionally encountered people who thought that Batman Begins was supposed to be a prequel to the 1989 Tim Burton movie, even though that makes no sense and certainly doesn't hold up to examination.
And, of course, let's never forget several headcases on various Planet of the Apes websites/listservs who keep insisting to this very day that the Roddy McDowall originals, the '70s live-action series, the '70s animated series, the Marvel Comics series, the 2001 Tim Burton remake, and the current Andy Serkis movies are all somehow interconnected, and part of a single continuity.
Continuity was never the series strong suit. The writers couldn't even keep the story straight from one movie to the next.
Then you can just slot the modern films in as prequels showing the unaltered timeline.
The TV shows, comics and Burton abomination ... well, it's best to treat them like Star Trek V and pretend they never happened.
Given the mental gymnastics it takes to get the first five films to fit together, connecting the modern series isn't that difficult. The account of the Ape uprising we get in the first three films is very different from what actually happens in Conquest and Battle. The only possible explanation is that the time travel changed history. Then you can just slot the modern films in as prequels showing the unaltered timeline..
(Doctor Milo was obviously a super-genius comparable to Reed Richards.)
Officially, 20th Century-Fox has endorsed the "split-timeline" theory, as shown by the massive gatefold chronology found in the 2008 Blu-Ray boxed set:Given the mental gymnastics it takes to get the first five films to fit together, connecting the modern series isn't that difficult. The account of the Ape uprising we get in the first three films is very different from what actually happens in Conquest and Battle. The only possible explanation is that the time travel changed history. Then you can just slot the modern films in as prequels showing the unaltered timeline.
Officially, 20th Century-Fox has endorsed the "split-timeline" theory, as shown by the massive gatefold chronology found in the 2008 Blu-Ray boxed set:
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Although it doesn't seem like a very long period of time elapses in the second movie (due to narrative time-compression), this chronology at least attempts to give Dr. Milo a few months of study-time of Taylor's crashed spaceship, even though Milo would still have to basically be the universe's greatest genius in history to have gotten it up and running the way he did.
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