Mark Hughes, a film blogger for Forbes with good connections to the Batman vs. Superman production, has said there's no truth to the rumors of any connection to the Nolan films.
But is the latest news saying that they're going to use Nolan's trilogy to give Batman a backstory in the same way that Singer used the first two Reeve films?
Don't forget The Spy Who Loved Me.An example I often like to use is the (pre-Daniel Craig) James Bond movies. You would get in a Moore, Brosnan or Dalton film a reference to an older film - most often Tracy (from OHMSS), who was referred to in For Your Eyes Only and Licence to Kill.
I'm a fan of the book and film versions of Bond, but I took the "continuity" of the pre-Craig films the same way that you have to take long-running comic book continuity. Characters staying young after decades, backstory rooted in stories that were published and originally took place in the 1960s, a myriad of writers and artists imposing their own styles on the characters...not at all dissimilar from the decades of tone and actor shifts in the classic Bond films.
Superman Returns was a follow up to the Donner films. It was stated explicitly.
A followup, yes. But Singer and the writers were always careful to state that the events of the Donner movies formed more of a "vague history" to SR than things that literally happened.
Which was kind of a no brainer, really, given the much younger age of the actors, and, oh yeah, the fact the world of SR looked radically different from that of the previous films.
The fact that the perception still exists that SR is a follow-up to the Reeve films, even now nearly ten whole years after its release, is testament to what was a complete screw up in publicity terms.
I'm a fan of the book and film versions of Bond, but I took the "continuity" of the pre-Craig films the same way that you have to take long-running comic book continuity. Characters staying young after decades, backstory rooted in stories that were published and originally took place in the 1960s, a myriad of writers and artists imposing their own styles on the characters...not at all dissimilar from the decades of tone and actor shifts in the classic Bond films.
Don't forget The Spy Who Loved Me.An example I often like to use is the (pre-Daniel Craig) James Bond movies. You would get in a Moore, Brosnan or Dalton film a reference to an older film - most often Tracy (from OHMSS), who was referred to in For Your Eyes Only and Licence to Kill.
From Wiki:What was the TSWLM reference? Was the scene where Bond throws Blofeld (who is never named but it's clear who he's meant to be?) down a chimney not from FYEO? Or have I forgotten another reference?
In The Spy Who Loved Me, when Bond meets Anya Amasova in the Mujaba Club bar, in Cairo, Egypt, she recites a few facts about his life to prove that she had researched him. She mentions facts about his career and his relationships, noting that he had "...many lady friends, but married only once. Wife killed..." at which point Bond immediately cut her off, snapping "You've made your point." Anya comments that he's surprisingly sensitive, to which Bond responds, "About certain things."
The fact that the perception still exists that SR is a follow-up to the Reeve films, even now nearly ten whole years after its release, is testament to what was a complete screw up in publicity terms.
But the point is that it's not as simple as "exactly consistent" or "totally separate." It's fiction, not reality, and thus it can easily be between those extremes. Many, many, many works of fiction are loosely consistent with earlier works while still taking liberties with them and reinterpreting their details. Even a supposedly consistent canon is full of reinterpretations -- like Spock going from Vulcanian to Vulcan and from having a human "ancestor" to having a human mother, or like Superman going from just jumping really far to actually flying. And a lot of sequels or revivals do take liberties with the source; modern Doctor Who, for example, has contradicted or reinvented a lot from the original series (which had already contradicted and reinvented itself many times over nearly three decades), codifying the conceit of the Time War changing history as its excuse. The Stargate SG-1 TV series deliberately reworked or ignored a number of details from the movie while assuming that the events of the movie nonetheless happened in the show's universe -- and virtually every other TV spinoff of a movie that's ever been made has done much the same thing (e.g. the Starman TV series acknowledged the events of the movie as real but retconned them to have happened 10-12 years earlier).
So just because it wasn't absolutely consistent, that doesn't mean it wasn't intended to be a followup. On the contrary, it's rare for a revival of an old continuity not to reinterpret its details in some ways.
After all, these are stories, not documentaries. And any ongoing story is a work in progress. The creative process fundamentally incorporates revision -- that's how we turn our rough ideas into more refined ideas, correct our mistakes, etc. So to a writer or artist, there is no inconsistency between wanting to continue a story and wanting to change things about it. The changes are part of the process of refining the creation, polishing it, adapting it to a new medium or new audience.
My Trek comment refers to the fact that Abrams pretends its the same universe but changes all the "rules" of the Trek verse around so it is nothing like the original universe.
That the audience at large failed to take to Superman Returns has been largely attributed to confusion over what it was supposed to be. Some people just assumed it was 'Superman 5' (it isn't), something which IMO is compounded by it being bundled with the Reeve movies in boxsets and the like. When it really shouldn't be.
That the audience at large failed to take to Superman Returns has been largely attributed to confusion over what it was supposed to be. Some people just assumed it was 'Superman 5' (it isn't), something which IMO is compounded by it being bundled with the Reeve movies in boxsets and the like. When it really shouldn't be.
And that assumption on your part is what I disagree with. It's clearly meant to be an approximate continuation of the first two Reeve films, with a few elements reworked and modernized in the same way that modern Marvel comics modernize events from '60s comics while still pretending to be continuations of them. I mean, really, the similarities enormously outweigh the differences -- the Williams theme, the crystalline Kryptonian technology, the backstory of Superman and Lois having been lovers, Luthor's obsession with real estate and preference in female associates, Superman's quote of his own line about flying being the safest way to travel, the use of Marlon Brando as Jor-El... I mean, really, that is obviously a hell of a lot more than just an homage. It's meant as a sequel, but like many, many sequels and revivals, it updates and reworks elements of its source.
But what I'm trying to get across is that it's very common for a revival of an old property, or a series based on a movie, or any continuation by new creators in a new context, to be an inexact continuation and partial reinvention, cherrypicking some elements while ignoring or changing others, even while pretending to be, at least roughly, a direct continuation. It's not even remotely unique to SR. Indeed, historically, I'd say inexact continuations are far more common than perfectly faithful ones. Audiences have become more picky about continuity in the age of home video and online episode guides, allowing exact story details to be more easily recalled.
From Wiki:What was the TSWLM reference? Was the scene where Bond throws Blofeld (who is never named but it's clear who he's meant to be?) down a chimney not from FYEO? Or have I forgotten another reference?
In The Spy Who Loved Me, when Bond meets Anya Amasova in the Mujaba Club bar, in Cairo, Egypt, she recites a few facts about his life to prove that she had researched him. She mentions facts about his career and his relationships, noting that he had "...many lady friends, but married only once. Wife killed..." at which point Bond immediately cut her off, snapping "You've made your point." Anya comments that he's surprisingly sensitive, to which Bond responds, "About certain things."
When Bond and Future Beatle Wife are introducing themselves at the bar by quoting from each other's dossiers. Quoted imperfectly from memory:
"Many lady friends, but married only once. Wife killed in..."
"Thank you, you've made your point."
"You're sensitive."
"About some things, yes."
EDIT: Curses, beaten to the punch!
I strongly suspect it's why for example the continuity issues between The Wrath of Khan and The Search for Spock were immaterial, until home video made it possible to pore over every little detail.
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