I've been waiting for a SPECTRE movie (based on the ghostly DC comic book hero) for years now . ...
Although I suppose the title of the new Bond movie complicates matters.
Well, they could call it The Spectre.
I've been waiting for a SPECTRE movie (based on the ghostly DC comic book hero) for years now . ...
Although I suppose the title of the new Bond movie complicates matters.
I've been waiting for a SPECTRE movie (based on the ghostly DC comic book hero) for years now . ...
Although I suppose the title of the new Bond movie complicates matters.
Well, they could call it The Spectre.
You are literally the first person I have ever heard say a good thing about the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen movie, and something bad about the Watchmen comic.
Forgive me if I don't find projects that make a major plot point about a superhero who can't "perform" unless he's wearing his costume compelling material.
It had something to say about confidence, self image and feeling less than useful. And it was hardly a major plot point. It was an 'aside'.
Not every story has to be uplifting and inspirational. Darker stories and themes are also worthy of exploration.
Sometimes you want Frank Capra or George Lucas. Other times you want Alfred Hitchcock or David Lynch . . . .
Author as franchise: how about "Arthur C Clarke theatre"? They could adapt many of his various books into cable movies.
One franchise sorely overlooked: the original Ian Fleming James Bond novels. Not the uber-budget, colossal scope films of the same names. These books all take place in the 1950's and are REALLY good. They are relatively short, too. A single book could probably be adapted into a 2-hr tv movie. The public is clamoring for well-done period dramas today. These books could make a terrific 1 or 2 year cable series. EON really should consider this as a "gap years" project between films.
I would love to see period Bond movies (if they were doing it in this way, they wouldn't need to have Daniel Craig, they could get less expensive actors to play TV 007). But I don't think there's the remotest chance of Eon taking a chance with their cash cow and doing something like this.
What are yours?
I for one wish TSR (and later Wizards of the Coast) hadn't so badly mishandled the Dungeons and Dragons property. Some of the books (esp the early ones) would make fantastic films. I'm thinking specifically of Ed Greenwood's "Spellfire" duology and just about anything Elaine Cunningham wrote for the Harpers sub-line. Arilyn Moonblade would rip it up as a female-lead action character.
Still on the subject of D&D and related, the first Dragonlance trilogy still cries out for justice to be done for it. Margaret Weis Productions put a hole in it's repuation with the half-assed animated effort at adapting part of the first book, but the material itself is first rate.
Lastly I'd think a dystopian future project like Shadowrun would fit right in with the times.
I think Warner Bros. has the rights to the Pern books, but I haven't heard any reports of movement on that property recently. Those would (will) be great.
Xena, please.
Have you ever seen the DC Showcase short that came with the animated DTV movies?I've been waiting for a SPECTRE movie (based on the ghostly DC comic book hero) for years now . ...
Although I suppose the title of the new Bond movie complicates matters.
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