Just one: The Abyss.Indeed. Has he ever made a "flop"?
Just one: The Abyss.Indeed. Has he ever made a "flop"?
Just one: The Abyss.Indeed. Has he ever made a "flop"?
An Avatar TV show would have the same problem that the on-hold Star Wars TV show has had: A brand strongly associated with spectacle in a format that doesn't compete with film special effects. Take Terra Nova, for example, a TV series that definitely wanted to be a bit like TV's Avatar (down to the Stephen Lang) and whose wow moments visually speaking were nothing comapred to Cameron's film... and Terra Nova never tried to do anything like the humanoid yet CGI Na'vi.He didn't go into any details on his TV show idea.
James Cameron has lost it
Just one: The Abyss.Indeed. Has he ever made a "flop"?
Huh, I love that movie. Never realized it was a flop.
It definitely didn't make back its production and marketing costs from theatrical box office given the split between the studio and theaters, and it was released at a time when ancillary markets generated much less revenue than they do today.It may be a bit of a financial "flop" it only made $90m to its $70m production budget so all being good it made back it's costs for both production and advertising.... Maybe.
That's true.But I think the movie has had pretty decent fan reaction and is something of a "cult classic."
ten creaky movies based on a cancelled space opera TV show...
He's not counting TMP, because what ever the hell it was, it wasn't Star Trek.ten creaky movies based on a cancelled space opera TV show...
11 movies, no?
He's not counting TMP, because what ever the hell it was, it wasn't Star Trek.ten creaky movies based on a cancelled space opera TV show...
11 movies, no?![]()
Yeah, Cameron doesn't have a clue. Hollywood has never milked a cash cow dry before, has it?![]()
So as natural as a couple of film sequels are, and as self-explanatory as a novel tie-in is, I can't quite wrap my head around how a TV show would work.
So as natural as a couple of film sequels are, and as self-explanatory as a novel tie-in is, I can't quite wrap my head around how a TV show would work.
An animated series, maybe? But even that would be expensive, I would think.
I guess he figures if Michael Bay can stick around for four special effects-laden franchise films that left the script at the door, so can he.
So as natural as a couple of film sequels are, and as self-explanatory as a novel tie-in is, I can't quite wrap my head around how a TV show would work.
An animated series, maybe? But even that would be expensive, I would think.
He has done TV before, Dark Angel.
An animated series, maybe? But even that would be expensive, I would think.
He has done TV before, Dark Angel.
Not only was that show a disaster that petered out after two seasons, but it also didn't possess the spectacle that a television series in the universe of Avatar would need to have.
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