People seem to forget that The Wizard of Oz book has had 34 official sequels, 13 of which were written by the original author. Most of them are almost completely forgotten now, and they haven't tarnished the original novel's reputation at all.I don't think either approach would "ruin" the trilogy any more than Bourne Legacy will ruin the Bourne films or Before Watchmen ruins Watchmen. Nolan's three films are still there, and you can watch them whenever you want. Just because someone else picks up the toys and runs with them doesn't harm them.
That's not like the Bond films. The Bond series has no overarching story or character arcs. Nolan's trilogy has a beginning, middle, and end, and it ends with Bruce Wayne retired and a definitive statement that he has to stop being Batman. There's no way to continue with the continuity of Nolan's Bruce Wayne without spoiling Nolan's story.Another route, and no one's discussed this, would be to treat the series like the Bond films. Bale and Nolan are done? Fine. Replace them but continue the continuity of the films.
What? There's a definite SPECTRE plot arc across the first seven films, spanning two actors, and Diamonds are Forever begins with Connery-Bond avenging the death of Lazenby-Bond's wife in the previous film. I don't know which Bond movies you've seen, but the Bond movies I've seen have story and character arcs across films and actors.That's not like the Bond films. The Bond series has no overarching story or character arcs.Another route, and no one's discussed this, would be to treat the series like the Bond films. Bale and Nolan are done? Fine. Replace them but continue the continuity of the films.
Speaking of actors... Rutger Hauer was missing in this.
What? There's a definite SPECTRE plot arc across the first seven films, spanning two actors, and Diamonds are Forever begins with Connery-Bond avenging the death of Lazenby-Bond's wife in the previous film. I don't know which Bond movies you've seen, but the Bond movies I've seen have story and character arcs across films and actors.That's not like the Bond films. The Bond series has no overarching story or character arcs.Another route, and no one's discussed this, would be to treat the series like the Bond films. Bale and Nolan are done? Fine. Replace them but continue the continuity of the films.![]()
People seem to forget that The Wizard of Oz book has had 34 official sequels, 13 of which were written by the original author. Most of them are almost completely forgotten now, and they haven't tarnished the original novel's reputation at all.
Not really. There are recurring villains, but it's a stretch to say the series has a continuing story (it certainly hasn't since the 60s in even that minor degree), and Bond's character doesn't develop, or arrive at an ending. There's no Bond film that has spent the whole movie showing how Bond needs to stop being a secret agent, ending with him quitting and living happily ever after with his love interest, only for the next movie to have him back on the job. The Bond movies are inherently open-ended. Nolan's Batman trilogy is just that, a trilogy. It has a beginning, a middle, and an end for Bruce Wayne.What? There's a definite SPECTRE plot arc across the first seven films, spanning two actors, and Diamonds are Forever begins with Connery-Bond avenging the death of Lazenby-Bond's wife in the previous film. I don't know which Bond movies you've seen, but the Bond movies I've seen have story and character arcs across films and actors.![]()
You should check out the Daniel Craig Bond movies.Not really. There are recurring villains, but it's a stretch to say the series has a continuing story (it certainly hasn't since the 60s in even that minor degree), and Bond's character doesn't develop, or arrive at an ending. There's no Bond film that has spent the whole movie showing how Bond needs to stop being a secret agent, ending with him quitting and living happily ever after with his love interest, only for the next movie to have him back on the job. The Bond movies are inherently open-ended. Nolan's Batman trilogy is just that, a trilogy. It has a beginning, a middle, and an end for Bruce Wayne.
What? There's a definite SPECTRE plot arc across the first seven films, spanning two actors, and Diamonds are Forever begins with Connery-Bond avenging the death of Lazenby-Bond's wife in the previous film. I don't know which Bond movies you've seen, but the Bond movies I've seen have story and character arcs across films and actors.That's not like the Bond films. The Bond series has no overarching story or character arcs.Another route, and no one's discussed this, would be to treat the series like the Bond films. Bale and Nolan are done? Fine. Replace them but continue the continuity of the films.![]()
You should check out the Daniel Craig Bond movies.Not really. There are recurring villains, but it's a stretch to say the series has a continuing story (it certainly hasn't since the 60s in even that minor degree), and Bond's character doesn't develop, or arrive at an ending. There's no Bond film that has spent the whole movie showing how Bond needs to stop being a secret agent, ending with him quitting and living happily ever after with his love interest, only for the next movie to have him back on the job. The Bond movies are inherently open-ended. Nolan's Batman trilogy is just that, a trilogy. It has a beginning, a middle, and an end for Bruce Wayne.
Script for Casino Royale was written in 2005 and Craig was cast in 2006, before Batman Begins was released. I don't think that was their cue.And they, of course, took their cue from Batman Begins in opting to re-set the Bond series.
Oscar-nominated screenwriter Paul Haggis, who has been brought onboard "Casino Royale" to polish the first draft script by Neal Purvis and Rober Wade, has confirmed a major influence on the direction of the next James Bond film.
"Casino Royale" is set to take 007 back to the early days in his career as an agent with a licence to kill.
Speaking to a Canadian news site, Haggis said he's excited about sculpting the iconic secret agent into a much darker Bond.
"We're trying to do for Bond what Batman Begins did for Batman," he said, referring to the feature film prequel released this past summer that explained Batman's metamorphosis.
At this point I think it's most probably a likelihood without anything yet being discussed or established. For now they're just going to watch the money coming in.Isn't a reboot already being planned? Thought I read something about that a while back.
The comics continue in perpetuity out of necessity. These is Nolan's trilogy. The WB isn't going to continue his story if he doesn't want them to, because Nolan's a mega-valued creator whose future films the WB will undoubtedly want him to produce with them. That's why Nolan was allowed to give his take on the character such a definitive ending in the first place.The fact that Bruce Wayne has an arc in this trilogy in no way prevents him from being gifted an entirely different arc in a new trilogy. I don't doubt that the comic has had a number of Bruce Wayne retires and return plots to work with.
I just feel that given the decades of stories featuring the character I'm sure that there is more than enough inspiration for some more movies.
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