The backlash is because fans want a continuation rather than a reboot. Throwing away the amazing characters and mythology of the Buffyverse for absolutely no reason would be such a terrible waste.
It's way too late for a continuation.
Vampires and the need for Slayers to kill them seems to be a constant in the Buffyverse. All they have to do is say the new character is a slayer and there was a famous one who destroyed her hometown.It's way too late for a continuation.
Vampires and the need for Slayers to kill them seems to be a constant in the Buffyverse. All they have to do is say the new character is a slayer and there was a famous one who destroyed her hometown.
That's how I feel. How do you get backlash so quick. If they do keep it in the new universe I wonder about other things. I guess LA is destroyed in the universe isn't it? I thought it was overrun by demons in the series final of "Angel" and they went with that in the comics. Also if the show is going to be around a Hellmouth I guess Cleveland might be the setting for the show.
Jason
I'm curious why you assume that would be the case? Not knocking the idea but I'm not sure what you're seeing that is driving that assumption.I assume any new version will take the opportunity to deal with issues of today - fake news, the alt-right, gaslighting, whataboutisms, doublethink, illegal immigration, separating parents from children, plutocracy, media bias, social media, cyber warfare and other interference by foreign states, and so on - translated into terms of an endless struggle against the forces of darkness. I'd be fine with that. As long as it's not just about making the transition from teenage to adult life.
The original series didn't do a lot of current issue nonsense, so I don't see why one would expect it now.
Whedon and Marti Noxon have gone on record saying that Season 7 was an Iraq War allegory. Also, Warren in Season 6 was clearly an abusive misogynist. As was Preacher Caleb in Season 7, a comment on the rampant sexism within many conservative religious movements.
As a matter of fact, almost all the Big Bads were either religious figures (The Master, Glory, Preacher Caleb/The First Evil), abusive men/boyfriends (Angelus, Warren) or patriarchal government institutions (Mayor Wilkins, the military's experiment Adam). Anyone that thinks Buffy wasn't political is kidding themselves. Just as much as the "keep your liberal social commentary out of MY Star Trek/Doctor Who/Romero zombie movies" crowd.
Well they did do issue's but I don't think it was a current events type of show. It was more about universal truths of going from kid to a adult while also being about female empowerment.
As others have pointed out, topical issues were heavily disguised as allegories and usually weren't explicitly called out. I agree the original show didn't delve deeply into social commentary but it doesn't mean the new one won't include such elements - the temptation must be there given recent history. The new show must have a different dynamic to distinguish itself from the old one and give itself some vitality. My guess might well turn out to be incorrect but that won't be the first time I've been wrong.I'm curious why you assume that would be the case? Not knocking the idea but I'm not sure what you're seeing that is driving that assumption.
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