Trailer for the Animated Crisis on Infinite Earths Trilogy.
Trailer for the Animated Crisis on Infinite Earths Trilogy.
I can see it now 20 years down the line:Why keep redoing CoIE? The damn thing was published in 1986!
DC loves to keep mining its proven cash cows. There have been eleventy-million new editions of things like CoIE, Dark Knight Returns, Death of Superman, Watchmen, etc., while tons of great comics from the company's decades of history have never been reprinted at all.Why keep redoing CoIE? The damn thing was published in 1986!
Why keep redoing CoIE? The damn thing was published in 1986!
I think you nailed it right on the head, here. This might be DC Studios Animation clearing the decks in preparation for the unified DCU continuity.Although maybe this has to do with Gunn's plan to reboot everything and make it all unified from now on.
I truly hope you are correct.Only in this case, it appears the animated version might handle it with the creativity and respect a COIE adaptation deserves, which would be a first.
I think you nailed it right on the head, here. This might be DC Studios Animation clearing the decks in preparation for the unified DCU continuity.
Looking at the trailer, this is not really what I was expecting. They'd have had the chance to do draw from the different DC animated universes, like the DCAU, the Super Friends universe, the Fleischer Superman universe, the Teen Titans universe, The Brave & the Bold universe, the Young Justice universe, ... doesn't look like that's gonna happen with this.
Crossovers are crossing over so much it crosses a line.It's like Grumpy Smurf around here sometimes, I hate it when crossovers cross over things.
The '80s Alvin and the Chipmunks had an episode where they go back in time and they meet the versions of themselves from the '60s show.I'm trying to remember what the first thing was that treated a previous adaptation of the same series as a parallel universe. The earliest thing I can think of is the 2009 finale of the 2003 Ninja Turtles animated series, which crossed over with the '87 cartoon and original comics continuities. I'm surprised I can't think of an earlier example, but it is a conceit that's only really taken off in the past few years.
But isn't the whole point of a story like to bring together familiar characters from alternate universes that we've seen before? Doing this and not bringing back the characters from earlier animated series kind of defeats the whole point of even doing it if you ask me.At this point, I'd find it refreshing to see a multiverse story that didn't treat earlier, unconnected screen adaptations as part of the same multiverse. I've always found that an implausible conceit, and it's been done so often in the past few years that it's become a cliche.
I'm trying to remember what the first thing was that treated a previous adaptation of the same series as a parallel universe. The earliest thing I can think of is the 2009 finale of the 2003 Ninja Turtles animated series, which crossed over with the '87 cartoon and original comics continuities. I'm surprised I can't think of an earlier example, but it is a conceit that's only really taken off in the past few years.
But isn't the whole point of a story like to bring together familiar characters from alternate universes that we've seen before?
First off, like you yourself acknowledge, CoIE is NOT the story that explores the "path not taken". Neither was "Flash of Two Worlds", for that matter, that was exactly the "bring back earlier versions as an alternate universe for nostalgia" that you complain about. So, why would you expect an adaptation of CoIE to do that?That's the point of a very narrow category of story that's only really been done frequently in the past few years (Arrowverse Elseworlds/Crisis, No Way Home, The Flash, Teen Titans vs. Teen Titans Go!, that multiverse episode of Titans), so it's weird to suggest it's some kind of inevitable default. Historically, the point of multiverse stories has been to explore alternate paths the characters could have taken -- think of Trek's Mirror Universe, TNG: "Parallels," Superman: TAS's "Brave New Metropolis," Smallville's Earth-2, Stargate's "There But For the Grace of God," Red Dwarf's "Parallel Universe" and Ace Rimmer episodes, Sliders, Everything Everywhere All at Once, etc. Even in the Spider-Verse movies, none of the major alternate realities that drive the story are pre-existing movie or TV universes, just a few brief Easter-egg ones (although both of the Peter Parkers from the first movie were from universes similar to the Raimi continuity) They're inspired by various continuities from the comics, but they're all original adaptations thereof. In most multiverse stories until recently, the alternate timelines have been brand-new. It's only in the current climate that media culture has become so addicted to nostalgia and reminiscence that multiverse stories have been reduced to an excuse to revisit decades-old shows and movies.
Granted, the point of the original Crisis was to consolidate the various alternate DC Comics continuities that had been treated as parallel universes ever since Gardner Fox wrote "Flash of Two Worlds." (That's really the origin of the trope, though I was talking about its uses onscreen.) And if this were the first screen adaptation of the story, I could see the sense in using previous screen-adapted DC continuities as the substitutes for those. But the Arrowverse already did that, only 4 years ago. And so many other things have done it recently that it would just feel redundant by this point, as much as the whole project feels redundant.
First off, like you yourself acknowledge, CoIE is NOT the story that explores the "path not taken". Neither was "Flash of Two Worlds", for that matter, that was exactly the "bring back earlier versions as an alternate universe for nostalgia" that you complain about. So, why would you expect an adaptation of CoIE to do that?
Second, Spider-Verse, as you yourself also acknowledged, did use largely alternate Spideys from the comics. Spider-Man Noir, Spider-Ham, even Miles Morales, really. So, while they hadn't been used in movies before, fans were still somewhat familiar with these characters and got a kick out of seeing them.
Not to mention that an animated CoIE adaptation is freer to better include those earlier adaptations in the main story, as opposed to mostly cameos as they were in the Arrowverse version, because actor availability and costume budget aren't that much of an issue with animation.
Also, an animated version would have the chance to actually depict the different animation styles. Aside from the differences in character design, the Super Friends versions, for example, could be depicted to move as stiff as in the original show.
Instead, we're getting the threat of a Multiverse extinguished which we don't already know. If the DCAU was threatened by the Anti-Matter universe, it would have higher emotional stakes for us as the audience.
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