It is a good point that with examples like Psycho and Jaws, people barely remember that the sequels were even made. It's a little different for action and scifi franchises because they have a lot more different types of media surrounding them and people have more emotional attachment to the characters.
People are more emotionally attached to action and scifi characters? That's probably true around here, since this is a scifi board, but I'm not sure that's generally the case.
Heck, PBS ran a sequel to Pride and Prejudice just a few weeks ago . . . and, trust me, the world is full of Jane Austin fans who are as invested in those characters as some of us are in Batman or Sarah Connor!![]()
It is a good point that with examples like Psycho and Jaws, people barely remember that the sequels were even made. It's a little different for action and scifi franchises because they have a lot more different types of media surrounding them and people have more emotional attachment to the characters.
People are more emotionally attached to action and scifi characters? That's probably true around here, since this is a scifi board, but I'm not sure that's generally the case.
Heck, PBS ran a sequel to Pride and Prejudice just a few weeks ago . . . and, trust me, the world is full of Jane Austin fans who are as invested in those characters as some of us are in Batman or Sarah Connor!![]()
Very true. Maybe instead of limiting it to action/scifi it should be more generally "Franchises that elaborate subcultures form around".Or even "Franchises that put a lot of effort into getting the viewer heavily invested in the characters' fate". Nobody gets in a huff about all the Sherlock Holmes incarnations which bear little or no resemblance to the original characters. Nobody is overly concerned that Dumb And Dumber To will besmirch the original.
People are more emotionally attached to action and scifi characters? That's probably true around here, since this is a scifi board, but I'm not sure that's generally the case.
Heck, PBS ran a sequel to Pride and Prejudice just a few weeks ago . . . and, trust me, the world is full of Jane Austin fans who are as invested in those characters as some of us are in Batman or Sarah Connor!![]()
Very true. Maybe instead of limiting it to action/scifi it should be more generally "Franchises that elaborate subcultures form around".Or even "Franchises that put a lot of effort into getting the viewer heavily invested in the characters' fate". Nobody gets in a huff about all the Sherlock Holmes incarnations which bear little or no resemblance to the original characters. Nobody is overly concerned that Dumb And Dumber To will besmirch the original.
Closer, but I question whether Holmes doesn't have his own cult following, on screen and in prose. The only difference is that Holmes fans have had a century or so to get used to the idea of multiple sequels and remakes. And, of course, the original books were part of an ongoing series so sequels were built into the format . . ..
I think that was more an issue of competition; if I recall correctly, the BBC Sherlock had just emerged around the same time.Very true. Maybe instead of limiting it to action/scifi it should be more generally "Franchises that elaborate subcultures form around".Or even "Franchises that put a lot of effort into getting the viewer heavily invested in the characters' fate". Nobody gets in a huff about all the Sherlock Holmes incarnations which bear little or no resemblance to the original characters. Nobody is overly concerned that Dumb And Dumber To will besmirch the original.
Closer, but I question whether Holmes doesn't have his own cult following, on screen and in prose. The only difference is that Holmes fans have had a century or so to get used to the idea of multiple sequels and remakes. And, of course, the original books were part of an ongoing series so sequels were built into the format . . ..
Yeah, the Sherlock fandom is huge - and there were quite a few complaints when CBS started making Elementary, so there is a batch of fans that is not quite used to multiple sequels or remakes yet.
I think that was more an issue of competition; if I recall correctly, the BBC Sherlock had just emerged around the same time.Closer, but I question whether Holmes doesn't have his own cult following, on screen and in prose. The only difference is that Holmes fans have had a century or so to get used to the idea of multiple sequels and remakes. And, of course, the original books were part of an ongoing series so sequels were built into the format . . ..
Yeah, the Sherlock fandom is huge - and there were quite a few complaints when CBS started making Elementary, so there is a batch of fans that is not quite used to multiple sequels or remakes yet.
However, I think there is some precedent where sequels did, in essence, ruin the original.
Alien3 is possibly the most glaring example of this. It basically took what everyone loved about Aliens (Ripley's heroic rescue of Newt and triumph of the Aliens) and gutted it by killing Newt and revealing that Ripley was, herself, infected. The sequel meant that everything Ripley accomplished in the second film meant absolutely nothing.
The only thing for me is remakes with the same name. So if you're talking to somebody (probably somebody younger than you) and you something like say "oh have you seen Total Recall? Or Planet of the Apes?" and they might reply with "oh yeah those movies suck."
And then you have to work out which version they're talking about, and often it's the lame remakes (2001/2012 of those two) rather than the great originals (1968/1990)
I'm not really saying remakes should have different names, but just that a bad one can then tarnish the original in a non-fan's eyes
I might be old fashioned but for me it doesn't matter if a film /TV show is B&W or colour so long as it enterainsI have a few B&W movies in my collection such as "The Longest Day" & "Dr. Strangelove or How I learned to stop worrying and love the Bomb"
Just to be clear, I have no problem with B/W movies. Heck, I watch more old movies on TCM than is probably healthy and am currently working my way through a boxed set of all original Universal "Dracula" movies.
But I have met people for whom this is a deal-breaker, and I suspect that those folks are only going to see the most recent remake anyway, and were never concerned with the reputation of the earlier version to begin with.
I'll second that I never really liked Aliens that much, and I appreciated Alien 3 for jettisoning those silly Cameron caricatures.
I didn't like ANY of the Terminator movies after the first one, especially since T2 was just a rehash of the first, made a mockery of the closed-loop time travel thing and gave it some silly fairytale ending.
It's always bugged me that Cameron took one of the greatest horror movies ever made (it's basically a haunted-house movie) and made a sequel that was little more than a dumb action movie.
I never really got the Alien 3 hate. I think it's pretty solid and about on par with Aliens.
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