Announcing our newest Disney Princess, Kaylee Frye.
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Announcing our newest Disney Princess, Kaylee Frye.
![]()
Finest princess in the 'Verse!Announcing our newest Disney Princess, Kaylee Frye.
![]()
I can't agree enough on this point. I still have high hopes for Dark Phoenix but between the sour taste left behind by Apocalypse and the bizarre need to decade jump each film has lowered my expectations considerably.The funny thing with Kinberg (and Singer), if he'd just stopped with Days of Future Past it would have been a fantastic mike drop for the team-oriented X-Men movies with Logan then providing a great epilogue/franchise capper. Then they had to go and make two more mainline X-Men movies.
While I have no personal investment with those characters or the film in general (beyond a few cast members), I was intrigued by the creative notions the film seemed to be going with so I'll be disappointed for its sake if it doesn't get a theatrical release.As for New Mutants, according to Vanity Fair's recent piece that anonymously interviewed various Fox executives and marketing people, it's most likely headed to direct-to-streaming.
https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2019/03/inside-hollywoods-disney-fox-freakout
Disney owns too damned much.
Some things Disney now owns
...
Batman '66
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Lost in Space
The Time Tunnel
Land of the Giants
if he'd just stopped with Days of Future Past it would have been a fantastic mike drop for the team-oriented X-Men movies with Logan then providing a great epilogue/franchise capper.
No, only the news aspect of Fox is being spun off. All the TV properties are theirs. Maybe the sports aspect too because Disney owns ESPN and a slew of other sports networks. Not too sure on that. I don't watch sports and never paid attention to what was going to happen to that.Are you sure? I think Warner Bros./DC gained ownership of that, given that they've been able to do comics and animated movies based on it in recent years.
Besides, my understanding is that the deal calls for splitting apart Fox's movie properties to be owned by Disney and its TV properties to be sold off to someone else. Is that just the current TV networks, as opposed to older TV shows?
Similar question. I don't think Fox owns these. The Lost in Space feature film was from New Line (a division of Warner Bros.) and the current Neflix series is from Legendary.
No, only the news aspect of Fox is being spun off. All the TV properties are theirs. Maybe the sports aspect too because Disney owns ESPN and a slew of other sports networks. Not too sure on that. I don't watch sports and never paid attention to what was going to happen to that.
Assets being assumed by the acquisition include the 20th Century Fox film and TV studios, Fox Television Group (along with cable channels such as FX), international networks, a 73% stake in National Geographic Partners, Indian television broadcaster Star India, a 30% stake in Hulu, and other key assets. 21st Century Fox has spun-off the Fox Broadcasting Company, Fox Television Stations, Fox News Channel, the Fox Business Network, FS1, FS2, Fox Deportes and the Big Ten Network into the new Fox Corporation.
That is what I meant. Disney is taking all the Fox property in television and movies excepting the news and the sports. Plus a few international properties.No, they're spinning off a lot of their TV assets. According to Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acquisition_of_21st_Century_Fox_by_Disney
So I guess that does mean Disney gets the shows produced by Fox's TV studio, just not the networks. Still, I wonder about the ownership of properties like Batman '66 and Lost in Space.
- Fox Sports Networks – regional sports networks that would be acquired by Disney, but under the agreement with the Department of Justice must be sold to third parties within 90 days after the completion and formal closing of the main deal.[40]
- Fox Sports Latin America (only Mexican and Brazilian versions) – On February 21, 2019, Bloomberg reported that Disney has agreed to divest the Mexican and Brazilian Fox Sports channels.[131]
Sorry, that was supposed to be a joke. I forgot to put aMaybe, but I'm doubtful. They managed it with Spider-Man in Civil War but that was just one part inside of a larger production. They might have quietly arranged for someone to work on a script but that's as far as I can imagine them going, and that's assuming they were allowed to even do that.
No Dark Angel?Some things Disney now owns (on top of Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, The Muppets and the English-language rights to the works of Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki):
Star Wars (the first film)
Batman '66
The Green Hornet '66
How I Met Your Mother
This Is Us
Burn Notice
White Collar
Modern Family
Fresh Off the Boat
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Lost in Space
The Time Tunnel
Land of the Giants
The Fantastic Voyage
Doctor Doolitle
M*A*S*H
Manimal(!)
COPS
L.A. Law
Picket Fences
NYPD Blue
Chicago Hope
Murder One
Ally McBeal
Boston Public
Boston Legal
Alien Nation
Buffy the Vampire Slayer & Angel
Firefly
Dollhouse
The X-Files & Millennium
Alien
The Abyss
Titanic
Avatar
Predator
The Omen
The Fly
Planet of the Apes
Joy Ride & Wrong Turn
Independance Day
Home Alone
The Sound of Music
Mrs. Doubtfire
Speed
The Full Monty
There's Something About Mary
Office Space Borat
Ice Age
Minority Report
Anastasia
My Name is Earl & Raising Hope
The Simpsons & Futurama
Family Guy & American Dad
Bob's Burgers & Die Hard
The Orville
King of the Hill
24
New Girl
The Last Man on Earth
Glee
American Horror Story
American Crime Story
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Archer
Bones
Arrested Development
Prison Break
Malcolm in the Middle
Better Off Ted
Wonderfalls
Journeyman
Awake
Enlisted
The Grinder
Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23
Terriers
and Making History *pours one out*
This commercial came out after the merger.
They showed Walter Bishop from Fringe. That was lovely, I still miss him.This commercial came out after the merger.
So I guess that does mean Disney gets the shows produced by Fox's TV studio, just not the networks. Still, I wonder about the ownership of properties like Batman '66 and Lost in Space.
No Dark Angel?
Some things Disney now owns (on top of Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, The Muppets and the English-language rights to the works of Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki):
Star Wars (the first film)
Batman '66
The Green Hornet '66
How I Met Your Mother
This Is Us
Burn Notice
White Collar
Modern Family
Fresh Off the Boat
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Lost in Space
The Time Tunnel
Land of the Giants
The Fantastic Voyage
Doctor Doolitle
M*A*S*H
Manimal(!)
COPS
L.A. Law
Picket Fences
NYPD Blue
Chicago Hope
Murder One
Ally McBeal
Boston Public
Boston Legal
Alien Nation
Buffy the Vampire Slayer & Angel
Firefly
Dollhouse
The X-Files & Millennium
Alien
The Abyss
Titanic
Avatar
Predator
The Omen
The Fly
Planet of the Apes
Joy Ride & Wrong Turn
Independance Day
Home Alone
The Sound of Music
Mrs. Doubtfire
Speed
The Full Monty
There's Something About Mary
Office Space Borat
Ice Age
Minority Report
Anastasia
My Name is Earl & Raising Hope
The Simpsons & Futurama
Family Guy & American Dad
Bob's Burgers & Die Hard
The Orville
King of the Hill
24
New Girl
The Last Man on Earth
Glee
American Horror Story
American Crime Story
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Archer
Bones
Arrested Development
Prison Break
Malcolm in the Middle
Better Off Ted
Wonderfalls
Journeyman
Awake
Enlisted
The Grinder
Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23
Terriers
and Making History *pours one out*
This commercial came out after the merger.
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