Some people go as far as calling WWI and WWII one big event, with the Treaty of Versailles being the fuze that burned between outright fighting.
I'm one of them actually... just a 20-year armed truce in the middle.
Some people go as far as calling WWI and WWII one big event, with the Treaty of Versailles being the fuze that burned between outright fighting.
That's sounds like an oversimplification. Were Pearl Harbour and the Pacific campaigns a direct result of Versailles? No, of course not and that was most certainly a significant part of the wider conflict we call WWII.
Who knows, in a few centuries scholars may decide that the whole period from the assassination of the archduke of Austria-hungary to the fall of the Berlin wall as a single string of conflicts, akin to the Hundred Years War.
Who knows, in a few centuries scholars may decide that the whole period from the assassination of the archduke of Austria-hungary to the fall of the Berlin wall as a single string of conflicts, akin to the Hundred Years War
ANNNYYYYWWWAAAAAYYYY......
Going back to the topic (), I would like to think that JMS has one such arc point up his sleeve, one that the fans will love to see on the screen, and one that joe casual movie-goer would also love but not worry about not knowing the full arc beforehand.
Honestly, I would be happiest with the announcement being the revival of Babylon 5 books. With a few notable deaths over the years, Andreas Katsulas and Richard Biggs, it would be difficult to see B5 on the screen and even if we did get a movie, I'm not sure that would guarantee our seeing an entire arc.
With the iPad, Kindle, etc. it might be the perfect time for more books. The publisher's could forgo paperbacks and minimize their potential losses. I think ebooks allow for more niche material to be published.
Unless I missed something that the announcement was definitely about a movie, I'd say books are more likely.
The only thing we know is that they're waiting on contracts to be finalized for something, but no hard info beyond that.Unless I missed something that the announcement was definitely about a movie, I'd say books are more likely.
Honestly, I would be happiest with the announcement being the revival of Babylon 5 books. With a few notable deaths over the years, Andreas Katsulas and Richard Biggs, it would be difficult to see B5 on the screen and even if we did get a movie, I'm not sure that would guarantee our seeing an entire arc.
With the iPad, Kindle, etc. it might be the perfect time for more books. The publisher's could forgo paperbacks and minimize their potential losses. I think ebooks allow for more niche material to be published.
Unless I missed something that the announcement was definitely about a movie, I'd say books are more likely.
While nothing's been said about what type of thing is under discussion, sadly, books are pretty unlikely for one simple reason: they didn't sell when they were being published and there's no publisher interested. Granted they were victims of no marketing, but publishers only care about the bottom line, especillay when it includes paying a hefty license fee to WB.
Books would certainly be more do-able to tell good stories without worrying about aging or departed actors but without a publisher to pay licensing and authors, it's not very likely.
Jan
Other than that or a movie I can't think what else might be worth such tight-lippedness (is that a word?)
Who said anything about a 100 million dollar budget? We don't even know if it is a film at all yet.
Serenity was budgeted for $35 million.
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