Then I hope the deal never happens. For me 'Despecialised' Star Wars OT =Add in the distribution rights of Star Wars that would allow a profitable despecialized release of the OT at last.

Then I hope the deal never happens. For me 'Despecialised' Star Wars OT =Add in the distribution rights of Star Wars that would allow a profitable despecialized release of the OT at last.
My friend at work is a huge X-Men fan and she can't wait for Fox to lose the movie rights.Please, please, PLEASE, no Disney X-Men films! Despite what Marvel fanboys claim, FOX has done a great job creating the X-Universe and has given us quite a lot of great comic book movies. Which is more than I can say for Disney’s Marvel films.
Then I hope the deal never happens. For me 'Despecialised' Star Wars OT =. At least for me. After you've tried the special editions you never want to go back.
I'd like the original material reinserted to the new versions, but renovated to the same standard.You might literally be the first person who has said this in the history of the internet. Also your opinion makes no sense. Release the movies in their original form will not make the newer edited versions disappear.
Yeah, please no X-Men in the MCU the seperate universes work much better for both.
The X-Men movies are almost all one note affairs. They can't move past Magneto and Mystique. They're almost as bad as the first 5 Spider-Man movies in their repetitiveness.Please, please, PLEASE, no Disney X-Men films! Despite what Marvel fanboys claim, FOX has done a great job creating the X-Universe and has given us quite a lot of great comic book movies. Which is more than I can say for Disney’s Marvel films.
I agree traditionally, but I do think recent movies such as Logan and potentially with New Mutants suggest that Fox is learning.MCU redefined how to do CBMs, the FoX-Men movies are still stuck in the mindset that it's the year 2000 and refuse to move on.
The only innovation they have is Deadpool, and that was more an independent movie made by Ryan Reynolds than a Studio Film.
Hopefully these laws are enforced. Regardless of the fanboys, this new cycle of corporate media consolidation can't be good.Sounds like the Federal Trade Commission still has antitrust laws that would keep Disney from swallowing up everything:
https://www.cbr.com/antitrust-laws-disney-fox-deal/
But there might still be a possibility of Disney getting some Fox properties, like the Marvel characters and the Star Wars distribution rights, while the rest of the film studio could be sold off to somebody else.
I'm basing it on the fact that the revised editions seem to be thoroughly reviled by many fans and I fear that what apparently happened with 'ET' could happen to them. For those who don't know, apparently a few years ago there was a screening of 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' attended by Stephen Spielberg & Harrison Ford and during a Q & A, questions turned to what George Lucas had done with the 'Star Wars' OT in particular the Han shooting Greedo scene and from there to what Spielberg himself did with 'ET' in 2004, substituting 'walkie-talkies' for guns etc. As a result he put it to the audience what to do about 'ET' when it eventually came time to release it on Blu-Ray and the audience were overwhelmingly in favour of releasing the theatrical cut. Spielberg allegedly replied to the audience, saying something like 'Okay'. Instead of releasing both versions of 'ET' using seamless branching and leaving it up to the viewer as to which version you may like to watch which is what you can do for 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind' which exists in three different versions on Blu-Ray and is what Relayer1 suggests should be done with the 'Star Wars' OT. I would be fine with that by the way.You might literally be the first person who has said this in the history of the internet. Also your opinion makes no sense. Release the movies in their original form will not make the newer edited versions disappear.
Then there's the director's cut of 'ST:TMP'. I know that there's a different reason behind that not being released on Blu-Ray but I still think that CBS/Paramount are held back by the perception that fans of the films don't like the newer cut based on part on their reaction to the 'Star Wars' special editions.I'd like the original material reinserted to the new versions, but renovated to the same standard.
Problem is, I actually LIKE a few of the revisions. Could we have a branching version whereby you can pick your own scenes ?
I prefer a Han Solo that, not only shoots first, but is the only one who shoots. I also prefer him not to have a rubber neck like Mr. Fantastic or Plastic Man.Then I hope the deal never happens. For me 'Despecialised' Star Wars OT =. At least for me. After you've tried the special editions you never want to go back.
Add in the distribution rights of Star Wars that would allow a profitable despecialized release of the OT at last
Can't see how the X-men could be fitted into the MCU unless its reviled that Mutants have been hidden for years by Professor X by making people in the MCU not notice them..but something happens and the truth is exposed.
I think this will depend on how Disney brands them, as long as they keep the FX/Fox names, or at least something that isn't explicitly Disney they'll probably be safe. Remember, Disney own Miramax for almost 20 years and in that time released a lot of very, very R rated movies including stuff by people like Kevin Smith, Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino. If Disney was comfortable releasing things like Clerks, Pulp Fiction, and From Dusk 'Til Dawn through Miramax, I'm pretty sure they'll be fine with things like American Horror Story, Atlanta, and Baskets.Am I the only one worried that this would end some of the more edgy stuff on FX like "American Horror Story", "Atlanta",Baskets" etc? Fox had rep, ever since it was created for being a little more bold and edgy than the stuff you would get on CBS,ABC,and NBC. They also take lots more risks than those networks, even though they get blasted also for cancelling them to soon but I will still take one season of "Firefly" over zero seasons of "Firefly."
Wouldn't Disney be the end of all of that? Disney is all about safe, family based entertainment and they do a good job at that but I do like having diversity in having networks that do other stuff as well.
Jason
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