Re: The Marvel Cinematic Universe: America's answer to the Potter film
While the Bond films may have not had a master plan from the perspective of storytelling, Broccoli and Saltzman's EON Productions definitely produced "successive films...back-to-back and released in quick succession."
There was a Bond film every year from 1962 to 1967 with the exception of '66. Then they were released on average every two years until 1989 (with the exception of Live and Let Die and the Man with the Golden Gun, done '73/'74, then the 3 year gap to Spy Who Loved Me).
I think its accurate to say that when EON acquired the rights to adapt Fleming's novels, they certainly had long-range plans similar to Warner's plans when they signed the contract with Rowling.
Another reason Trek and Bond don't compare to HP and Marvel is that the first two came out intermittently, planned and produced one film at a time and released only every few years, while HP and the Avengerverse films are the result of systematic master plans with successive films being made back-to-back and released in quick succession.
While the Bond films may have not had a master plan from the perspective of storytelling, Broccoli and Saltzman's EON Productions definitely produced "successive films...back-to-back and released in quick succession."
There was a Bond film every year from 1962 to 1967 with the exception of '66. Then they were released on average every two years until 1989 (with the exception of Live and Let Die and the Man with the Golden Gun, done '73/'74, then the 3 year gap to Spy Who Loved Me).
I think its accurate to say that when EON acquired the rights to adapt Fleming's novels, they certainly had long-range plans similar to Warner's plans when they signed the contract with Rowling.