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Cadaverous Pallor 12-04-2009 09:45 AM

Sequels to films that never were
 
The upcoming Burton's Alice, so far as I've let myself read, involves an older Alice who comes back to Wonderland. (I may be wrong - I'm avoiding spoilers as much as possible.) This in effect makes it a sequel to a film that never was. Yes, there have been plenty of Alice films, but stylistically nothing like Burton's vision.

This brings to mind two movies - Hook and Return to Oz. Also, sequels to non-existent films. For the record, I love both of them.

Are there more?

Superman Returns
doesn't really count. The actors channeled their predecessors so well, I think it actually counts as a sequel. Sure, they nuked the fridge a few times, but nothing can touch Superman IV in that department.

The newest Star Trek is an interesting one and can be argued from many angles...though the ideas that win out are that Nimoy is actually in it, and that the "reboot" concept is completely different.

More?

BarTopDancer 12-04-2009 10:00 AM

Not at the moment, only because I am confused as to what would constitute a sequel to a movie that never was.

I always considered Return to Oz a sequel to WOO and Hook a stand alone version of Peter Pan.

Or maybe I need more coffee.

Alex 12-04-2009 10:06 AM

Yeah, I'm a bit fuzzy on the idea here. If I understand correctly it is essentially this:

The creator of a new work chooses to delve into the later exploits of existing characters but completely independent of that original creation. Kind of like if I sat here and wrote the screenplay to Crocodile Dundee IV.

If so, I'd question Return to Oz because while it may be completely separated from The Wizard of Oz as a movie it is still an amalgmation of two of L. Frank Baum's sequel novels.

Hook, I can see. I'm not immediately coming up with another movie but the first thing that comes to are books that do a similar thing in taking a work in the public domain and writing the a sequel. Like the Gone with the Wind sequel written years back. After his death there was a mini cottage industry of other authors writing novels set in Isaac Asimov's Robots/Foundation universe using their own personal style, but those weren't entirely segregated.

Ghoulish Delight 12-04-2009 10:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cadaverous Pallor (Post 308174)
The upcoming Burton's Alice, so far as I've let myself read, involves an older Alice who comes back to Wonderland.

Oh really? I hope so since, as a general rule of thumb, I find Burton at his best when he's working from original material rather than adapting existing material (Bettlejuice, Nightmare, Mars Attacks, Edward Scissorhands, as opposed to Big Fish, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Planet of the Apes). Batman's an exception to the rule, though even there I prefer Returns which was more of a departure from the comic book world than the first. And Corpse Bride is an exception on the other side (original material that was just kinda meh). But I'll hold out hope that working with a new chapter to the story for Alice has inspired him to greatness once again.

As for the topic in the OP, I might throw the George Clooney Batman films in there. Sort of. I mean, they don't really follow directly from any Batman movie prior to it, and don't start at the beginning of the Batman storyline. But then, in the comic-book world that's hardly any big deal, happens all the time.

I agree with Hook. It definitely presumes a known backstory, yet no version of the backstory that matches what's in that movie ever existed.

BarTopDancer 12-04-2009 11:00 AM

So basically a sequel to a film that never was would be a movie based upon a film with completely different canon?

Tref 12-04-2009 01:20 PM

I always thought the Kaufman remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers was technically a sequel because it begins where the original ended, with Kevin McCarthy (as Dr. Miles J. Bennell) warning people that, "They're here!"

Strangler Lewis 12-04-2009 01:39 PM

Isn't every film a sequel to a film that was never made? Even a sequel, because one can imagine a totally different prequel focusing on different events in the characters' lives.

Chernabog 12-04-2009 01:46 PM

I can't think of any movies right now, but the video game "Alice" (by American McGee) was a "sequel" to Alice in Wonderland the same way the Burton movie is.

Though I don't think that Burton will present the Queen of Hearts as a giant tentacle monster.

Kevy Baby 12-04-2009 05:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex (Post 308179)
Kind of like if I sat here and wrote the screenplay to Crocodile Dundee IV.

Now that I would like to see!

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chernabog (Post 308221)
Though I don't think that Burton will present the Queen of Hearts as a giant tentacle monster.

How about a Giant Testicle Monster?

lashbear 12-04-2009 06:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chernabog (Post 308221)
I can't think of any movies right now, but the video game "Alice" (by American McGee) was a "sequel" to Alice in Wonderland the same way the Burton movie is.

Though I don't think that Burton will present the Queen of Hearts as a giant tentacle monster.

weren't the kids in that skoolhouse creepy ???? *shudder*


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