Remember when journalists used to do research before writing things down and publishing them?

I would’ve said the other way round - as @UssGlenn said Superman and FF are fresh new takes, someone starting the respective franchises from start. Definitely hard reboots, in the strict sense.Not sure of Superman or Fantastic Four count as a reboot. More like a remake. Jurassic Park though is very much a reboot. It's all still taking place in the same universe as the very first movie. They are now basically on their 3rd wave of main characters.
And while JP is a sequel within the same continuity as the previous films, it features a mostly, if not entirely, different cast from the original and a lot of the sequels (I’m subject to correction, as I don’t think I’ve seen a full movie in the series since the third one) and AFAIK is set on a different island. So, yeah, it’s in the same continuity but it’s not like one needs to have seen the original to follow it.
To be even more pedantic, FF is only a reboot in the sense that it's not in the continuity of any previous FF film. Arguably it's a sequel, not to any previous FF effort, of course, but in terms of being a continuation of the long-running MCU.I would’ve said the other way round - as @UssGlenn said Superman and FF are fresh new takes, someone starting the respective franchises from start. Definitely hard reboots, in the strict sense.
Those types seemed crucially unaware of the relevant content of the film: namely, that the Waynes are killed by Joe Chill as opposed to the Joker.I first remember it being used about Batman Begins - funny enough, many in the media were wrongly describing it as a prequel, as that was a buzzword in the wake of the Star Wars ones
I remember watching Batman Begins on DVD with roommates and at the end they were all, "How is it NOT a prequel?"
you've got your terminology all mixed up.
Superman/F4: Reboot. no connection to earlier incarnations. The term is meant to evoke "start fresh".
Jurassic World: Sequel, all the previous movies happened in their past.
A remake is a reboot that keeps largely the same plot, not just the basics.
I don't care how journalists misuse the terms, that's what they mean.
I would’ve said the other way round - as @UssGlenn said Superman and FF are fresh new takes, someone starting the respective franchises from start. Definitely hard reboots, in the strict sense.
But the word reboot has really now been widened, by media at least, to mean any sort of revival. Language changes (the word literally literally doesn’t mean literally anymore, for example) and the word reboot has only been in widespread in this sort of context for 20 years or so (I first remember it being used about Batman Begins - funny enough, many in the media were wrongly describing it as a prequel, as that was a buzzword in the wake of the Star Wars ones).
And while JP is a sequel within the same continuity as the previous films, it features a mostly, if not entirely, different cast from the original and a lot of the sequels (I’m subject to correction, as I don’t think I’ve seen a full movie in the series since the third one) and AFAIK is set on a different island. So, yeah, it’s in the same continuity but it’s not like one needs to have seen the original to follow it.
Either way, it seems pretty clear that brand name recognition sells. I’m sure *some*, possibly *many* people are fed up with sequels, remakes, reboots, revivals, spinoffs, etc, but just as many seem to view them as a pair of comfortable shoes they can slip back into.
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