It's a pretty good read and I understand Joss's statements about the matter. I still remember that flashback sequence with Angel lurking in the shadows after he learns there is another Slayer.
I don't know if this is necessarily news, as rumours of a Buffy movie without Sarah Michelle Gellar or Joss Whedon etc have been bouncing around for some time. But now it seems to be official, with an announcement by Warner Brothers that the world of the Slayer is to be rebooted for the big screen.
Atlas Entertainment announced today it is rebooting the beloved franchise, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, with Warner Bros. Pictures. Atlas' Charles Roven and Steve Alexander will produce the feature film alongside Doug Davison and Roy Lee of Vertigo Entertainment (The Ring, How to Train Your Dragon, The Departed). Whit Anderson is writing the script.
Warner Bros. Pictures optioned the rights from creators Fran and Kaz Kuzui, and from Sandollar Productions (Sandy Gallin and Dolly Parton), for Atlas and Vertigo to produce. Buffy the Vampire Slayer first appeared as a film in 1992, subsequently becoming a cult hit and spawning the wildly popular television series starring Sarah Michelle Gellar and David Boreanaz, among many others.
"Whit approached us with an exciting idea about how to update Buffy," said Roven. "There is an active fan base eagerly awaiting this character's return to the big screen. We're thrilled to team up with Doug and Roy on a re-imagining of Buffy and the world she inhabits. Details of the film are being kept under wraps, but I can say while this is not your high school Buffy, she'll be just as witty, tough, and sexy as we all remember her to be."
Whit Anderson is represented by CAA, Wirehouse Entertainment and Julian Zajfen at Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca, Fischer, Gilbert-Lurie & Stifflemen.
Yes, fans are awaiting the character's return. But they want her to be played by SMG, saying lines written by Whedon, Greenwalt etc. Who's betting that this is going to be some Twishite, Vampire Drearies rip-off, devoid of all the wit, humour and drama that fuelled the now-classic tv show?
Just to clarify, the TV series is not a continuation of the movie.
There are numerous differences with how the vampires are represented, SMG Buffy wasn't called in 1992, SMG Buffy burned down the gym unlike movie Buffy, etc
It's more of a continuation of Joss's original script.
Yeah it's the same basic story, but just saying to be nerdy, that movie is not "canon"
Yeah, that's been said. It's a continuation of the original script, not a reboot of the story as a whole. Mostly because the film was a bastardised version of the script.
Buffy (Kristy Swanson) is a stereotypical cheerleader at Hemery High School in Los Angeles. She is a carefree popular girl whose main concerns are shopping and spending time with her friends. While at school one day, she is approached by a man named Merrick Jamison-Smythe (Donald Sutherland). He informs her that she is The Slayer, or chosen one, and he is a Watcher whose duty it is to guide and train her. She initially refuses to believe his claims, but becomes convinced when he is able to describe a recurring dream of hers in great detail. Over the course of her training she becomes friends with Oliver Pike (Luke Perry), whose best friend has recently become a vampire. Oliver becomes the male equivalent of the traditional "damsel in distress", being rescued by Buffy or Merrick on several occasions. However, their relationship gradually becomes romantic and Oliver becomes her partner in fighting the undeads.
After several successful outings, Buffy is drawn into conflict with a local vampire king named Lothos (Rutger Hauer), who has killed a number of past Slayers. Lothos eventually kills Merrick as well, giving her the motivation she needs to face him in battle. They eventually clash during the middle of the senior dance at Buffy's high school. Through the use of her own unconventional methods, she is able to defeat Lothos and his minions.
Seven years is considered an eternity in Hollywood.
Update Buffy?! The show only ended 7 years ago!
Hell they're rebooting Spider-Man after three years and Superman after four years.
Hell they're rebooting Spider-Man after three years and Superman after four years.
And Star Trek after a four year gap between ENT and XI, and a seven year gap after Nemesis :P
Just to clarify, the TV series is not a continuation of the movie.
There are numerous differences with how the vampires are represented, SMG Buffy wasn't called in 1992, SMG Buffy burned down the gym unlike movie Buffy, etc
It's more of a continuation of Joss's original script.
Yeah it's the same basic story, but just saying to be nerdy, that movie is not "canon"
Not the issue. People were objecting to the very idea of a remake within such a short frame of time. "Not even old enough to warrant a remake" would be The Borgified Corpse's exact words.No, there's really not an amusing contradiction. The 1992 movie was a tree falling in the forest with no one to hear it.
It's not a re-imagining or a remake, but I would call it a reboot.Putting on my pedant hat, I wouldn't count the new Star Trek movie as a reboot,
[Not the issue. People were objecting to the very idea of a remake within such a short frame of time. "Not even old enough to warrant a remake" would be The Borgified Corpse's exact words.No, there's really not an amusing contradiction. The 1992 movie was a tree falling in the forest with no one to hear it.
Yes, but in this case, I'd be objecting to a remake of the 1992 movie even if the 1997-2004 TV franchise didn't exist. I mean, stylistically, there hasn't been a whole lot of changes between 1992 & 2010.
There's no reason to assume the new Buffy film will be stylistically similar to the earlier Buffy efforts. In fact one could make a case it'll be less similar then Whedon's 1997 reboot of the franchise because, however unhappy he was with the original film, he did write it. It's possible as the first such Buffy title Whedon is in no way involved in it could turn out to be fundamentally far more stylistically different.The reason why no one objected to the reboot of the Batman movies after only an 8 year gap from 1997-2005 is because Batman Begins was so thoroughly different from the 1989-1997 movies. It was a change in style & tone.
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