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The unnecessary reboot/remake of the week thread

Ridley Scott says they're in the process of making Gladiator III, whatever that means. Don't know why the studio would want to make another one after the box office failure of the (unnecessary) sequel. And it's not like they'd need to make it to appease a red hot director (Tarantino, Villeneuve, Nolan) so they can make other movies with him.

My guess is contractual obligations. Studios will often sign multiple movie deals with directors. And much easier to make something with an active IP than it is to start a new one or deal with an inactive IP. They already have everything in place due to the last one. So by letting him make another sequel, they fulfill part of their obligations with him.

We used to call those pilots

Why do they bother to create several episodes before knowing how they'll be received by the fans of the original show?

They're now called tax writeoffs! :lol:

But yeah, now instead of pilots, they seem to make entire seasons before they know shows will be a success.

Unrelated, but Netflix just got updated on my end to the new UI and oh god, it's a horrible mess. I thought the previous version was bad, but this takes the cake. It feels slower and harder to find what you're looking for. The current selection takes up a huge portion of the screen while you're trying to browse.
 
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Before they bring back old shows for a season, they should create single-episode specials to gauge interest.
For old shows a much easier and cheaper way to gauge interest is to look online. I don't think producing a one off special would tell them much more because even if the ratings are through the roof that still won't guarantee a continuing show would have similar success. A special is a one time event and people are more likely to turn on their tv once for that than they are doing it regularly.

But yeah, now instead of pilots, they seem to make entire seasons before they know shows will be a success.
Even in the old days they went into production before they knew if the show would be a success and were usually 6 weeks ahead of airing. With how short seasons are these days that's almost the entire season anyway and for effects heavy shows with a long post production there's pretty much no way to air episodes before the entire season is finished.
 
Paramount pursing Call of Duty film rights.

AR Content has optioned the TV rights to John Shirley’s action-thriller eleven book series “The Specialist," which he wrote under the pen name John Cutter. The Stallone movie of the same name is very very very very very very loosely based on it.

A Robin Hood series comes to MGM+ in November with Sean Bean as the Sheriff of Nottingham:

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Ridley Scott says they're in the process of making Gladiator III, whatever that means. Don't know why the studio would want to make another one after the box office failure of the (unnecessary) sequel. And it's not like they'd need to make it to appease a red hot director (Tarantino, Villeneuve, Nolan) so they can make other movies with him.
While I wholehearted agree that it was unnecessary, at $460 million box office vs a $250 budget, it's considered a success and one of the biggest box office takes of 2024.

And yeah... While I thought it was ok, I see zero reason for a part 3.
 
Even in the old days they went into production before they knew if the show would be a success and were usually 6 weeks ahead of airing.

Probably not before getting greenlit via pilots. Pilots were once used to sell the ideas to the studio, and then the audiences. Sometimes if a pilot was bad enough, it'd never make it past the studio, ie the US remake of Red Dwarf for instance.

A Robin Hood series comes to MGM+ in November with Sean Bean as the Sheriff of Nottingham:

But will he live or die during the first season?

Oh just what we need, another by the book Robin Hood retelling...

I appreciated the Russell Crowe version of the story for at least attempting something new.
 
IIRC there was supposed to be one a few years ago with Robin as the villain and the Sheriff as the hero. Christian Bale was to be Robin, leading to jokes that he would now have played Batman and Robin. I think this may have gradually transformed into the Ridley Scott/ Russell Crowe one.

Pretty sure Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer have just finished shooting one near Belfast (which sounds very like the Sean Connery Robin and Marian movie).
 
Okay I saw the video. So that brings up the other option. A voice impersonator that sort of sounds like him?

Something like that, although I'm sure a production wouldn't be able to claim it's William Daniels, and there'd be clauses against such a thing as there'd be a legality behind such a claim.
 
Paramount pursing Call of Duty film rights.

AR Content has optioned the TV rights to John Shirley’s action-thriller eleven book series “The Specialist," which he wrote under the pen name John Cutter. The Stallone movie of the same name is very very very very very very loosely based on it.

A Robin Hood series comes to MGM+ in November with Sean Bean as the Sheriff of Nottingham:

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

But will the sheriff still be alive at the end of the season?
 
Ok it's just a trailer but it seems to offer nothing we haven't seen before in a Robin Hood story, that was my point
Right, and my point was that I think we’ve had enough retelling of any variation of that story to last the next several generations, and should probably be left alone for a while. A truly unnecessary remake/reboot of a very worn out IP.
 
Supposedly the 2010 Robin Hood had a new way to tell the story but Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe weren't fans and had all of that removed and completely rewritten.
 
Even in the old days they went into production before they knew if the show would be a success and were usually 6 weeks ahead of airing. With how short seasons are these days that's almost the entire season anyway and for effects heavy shows with a long post production there's pretty much no way to air episodes before the entire season is finished.

To put it in perspective - The Twilight Zone's first Season had 36 episodes.

24 were in various stages of completion before the second episode, "One for the Angels", after the pilot had even aired.

"One for the Angels" was the second aired, but was the eight episode filmed.

The second episode filmed after the pilot, "The Lonely" aired tenth.
 
Supposedly the 2010 Robin Hood had a new way to tell the story but Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe weren't fans and had all of that removed and completely rewritten.

And yet it still had more of a unique flair to it than some other recent attempts. I think it's one of those movies that has aged better over time.
 
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