Posted on 11/15/2018 12:39:41 PM PST by EdnaMode
What is dead may never die.
This is a religious oath recited often by the people of the Iron Islands on Game of Thrones. It is also increasingly the guiding ethos of Hollywood development, where any familiar title, no matter how sacrosanct it might have once seemed, is ripe for a sequel, a prequel, a reboot or all of the above. This includes Game of Thrones itself, which is due to end next year but has a prequel in active development, and several other potential spinoffs waiting in the wings if that one works out OK.
Showbiz has been gripped with Zombie TV fever for years. Revivals and remakes are seen as an easy way to cut through the clutter of a universe with hundreds of original scripted shows airing each year: Oh look, heres Will and Grace are swapping banter like they always did, Roseanne and Jackie arguing in the kitchen (until a few too many racist tweets). Sometimes, these continuations turn out to be great, like large chunks of Twin Peaks: The Return. At others, they can be flawed in ways that make the audience reconsider the original shows legacy. (Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, for instance, had a lot of fans asking if Rory was always so awful, or had just become that way as an adult.)
(Excerpt) Read more at rollingstone.com ...
Been years since i’ve set foot in a physical theater.
I dont watch tv show reboots. I didnt watch most of the awful shows they are now trying to ressurect, the first time they were on tv.
I made this comment in another thread that they cannot do anything but reboots because they are not creative people running the industry but political hack propagandists so can only use pre-existing vehicles to mold for their propaganda.
Haven’t been to a movie joint in 25 years, and don’t foresee that streak ending before I do.
They no longer have fresh ideas.
Me either. They keep recycling.... garbage.
Television is an ever-widening maw which requires more and more to feed it, 24 x 7. Thus after originality has been drained, there's no other path than to return and try to recycle already proven material. Secondly, the name recognition alone will draw in viewers for at least a couple episodes, out of curiosity if nothing else.
The hopeful thing is that if you look hard enough you can find some decent shows. Some new, some not in production anymore. But it requires digging.
Hollywood an out of ideas after The Brady Bunch Re-Boot...............
Most of the good stuff is made from outside Hollywood.
KDramas are an example.
The new Robin Hood looks pathetic.
And how many times have they remade “A Star is Born”?
Last night, we saw the 80s Christmas classic Die Hard in the theater.
There were 5 total people there.
My wife had never seen it.
The Rookie is decent.
There were so many jump cuts in the Robin Hood commercial that I caught epilepsy from it.
I don’t know. I haven’t seen ANY OF THEM!................
I hope my library buys the “Trust” series (based on J. Paul Getty family events). That one sounds interesting.
I just hope this one doesn't have any insipid Bryan Adams songs on the soundtrack.
Dang. I would love to watch it on the big screen again. It's not Christmas until Hans Gruber falls from the Nakatomi Plaza building.
Ha, I had the picture.
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