What are your thoughts on this?
Reboot, SG1/Atlantis ended with them too advanced, I want a new story back to square one with just modern human tech. Only means of travel being the Stargate or occasional stolen ship.
I would still watch a revival if it happened, but I would prefer a reboot.
Reboots only work if the original was unsuccessful
If someone has a vision that can only be done with a reboot then they should create something original.
I wouldn't say that.
There have been a number of at least moderately successful reboots of successful series, such as Hawaii Five-0, Magnum P.I., MacGyver, Charmed, One Day at a Time, and the Mission: Impossible movies.
Creating new variations on existing ideas is a fundamental part of how creativity works. There can be great value in exploring how different artists tackle the same subject and develop it in different ways. Virtually every one of Shakespeare's plays was a "reboot" of some earlier play, myth, or historical account. And there have been many great "reboots" of Shakespeare, like West Side Story, Forbidden Planet, and Ran.
would consider most of those examples as a defense of my argument.
Of course that is the rare example that became successful. There have been many adaptations of older television series whose movies failed creatively and often financially.
These examples are different as well as they essentially do something new and different than the concept which inspired them.
An upcoming example is Rebel Moon, originally intended to be a Star Wars movie but reworked to be something original.
I think the premise and setting could've provided something more exotic and evocative that would have me interested in a reboot that leaned in that direction. SG-1 was a little too comfortable for my tastes though I can see that would have an appeal of its own.
The original had 10 full seasons of 20+ episodes, that's like four good runs for many series today, I'd be more interested in seeing another take.
How in the world can they be? Your argument, verbatim and entire, was, "Reboots only work if the original was unsuccessful (outside of super-heroes because their original source is not the film/television universe)." In every example I cited, the original and the reboot were both successful (defined as running at least four seasons), none of them were superheroes, and all of them originated in television.
But your examples don't fit what I'm talking about, since there's a difference between basing your story on a single specific work (like West Side Story from Romeo and Juliet, or Battle Beyond the Stars from The Magnificent Seven from Seven Samurai) and being broadly inspired by a genre or by multiple different works. Rebel Moon may be a reworking of a concept that was intended to be in the Star Wars universe, but that's different from retelling the story of a specific single movie.
I have the opposite take, I can still remember seeing the sights and sounds from the theater. The way the ships, guards, weapons, the gate, the ring, the costumes and so on are done were quite memorable from the movie. There was the whole androgynous thing going on with Ra and his charges. A sense of discovery that I suppose is inevitably not going to be in a long running series. I engaged with Stargate Universe more but that's also a different type of story.Interesting. That oddly echoes my feeling about the movie vs. the series. The movie took a concept with endless potential, a portal to another world, and couldn't think of anything to do with it but a lazy rehash of Ancient Egypt and warmed-over ancient-astronaut tropes from the 1960s-70s. I felt the series, conversely, fleshed out the premise far more richly. So I'm curious what you have in mind for a more exotic approach. Like, maybe less transplanted-human stuff, more genuine aliens?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.