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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
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I Floop the Pig
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I see one of the keys to considering it a "reboot" is revisiting the origin story, with the aim of saying, "This is NOT part of any existing timeline for this character, this is an entirely self-contained new universe that does not hinge on what's already been established." So event though Batman Returns and Batman Forever bear little resemblance to Burton's 2 Batman movies, I don't consider them reboots since they weren't an attempt to start everything from scratch and create a new timeline independent of what was before. Whereas Batman Begins is clearly a reboot since it went back to square one.
In that vein, Chris Reeve definitely counts as a reboot. Raime's Spiderman, even though there hadn't been a widely popular incarnation of Spiderman since the old cartoon series, is still a reboot by that definition. Trek is a bit of an oddball in that it tied itself into the existing timeline instead of just ignoring that timeline and creating its own. But the end result is essentially the same as a reboot, with the connection to the original timeline thrown in, as I've theorized before, to soften the blow to an audience that would otherwise not have been receptive to a reboot.
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#2 | |
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You broke your Ramadar!
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GD - I completely agree with you. Even though 'reboot' is a shiny new term, it's a tried-and-true tactic to revive old franchises.
Pretty much every Superman that Bornieo cited is a reboot, and I'd also agree that there have been several Batman reboots, with the first Burton and Batman Begins being the latest two. Quote:
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#3 |
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Kink of Swank
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I see the value in Ghoulish Delight's defintion, but the exceptions are glaring.
Was Casino Royale a reboot or not? It posited James Bond as a brand-new agent getting his Double Oh status. But it did not re-tell any origin story. In fact, since there never was an origin story, one could argue Casino Royale told the origin story for the first time. Does that make it a reboot? Or is starting the main character from scratch sufficient, even if it's not retelling a story told before? In a sense, the same can be said of Star Trek. It told the "origin" story of how these characters came to be together, and did so for the first time ever. Yet it, too, was clearly a reboot. Starting the characters from scratch again the only pertinent factor. Singer's Superman was likey an attempt to reboot. But while it was essentially a remake of Superman I and II of the Reeve series, it did not restart the timeline or the character at all. This is all clearly subjective, then ... it seems. And to get back to the original point, and without the benefit of the finished product yet existing, I'd peg the new Buffy as a new incarnation and not a reboot. But this is all the silliest of semantics. |
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#4 |
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I Floop the Pig
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Bond is its own massive exception since, really, every movie is a reboot. It was never serial, so it kinda doesn't really fit the whole model at all, so no I don't consider any Bond movie a "reboot" as it's not the kind of series that can be rebooted.
Of course it's subjective, and of course you can find exceptions. But "attempt to start a new timeline that is whole without need of other series that came before it" I think is the most complete generalization that covers most cases.
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'He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.' -TJ |
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#5 |
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8/30/14 - Disneyland -10k or Bust.
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Could someone please reboot the Chronicles of Narnia. That franchise is in desperate need of a reboot.
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#6 |
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Making Good Girls Go Bad
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I'd be happy if the (movie) series was just continued instead of being abandoned after Prince Caspian.
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Very well then, I contradict myself. (I am large, I contain multitudes.) -- Walt Whitman, "Song of Myself" |
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#7 |
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You broke your Ramadar!
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Yes, Casino Royale was a reboot.
As you've stated before (I think in the Star Trek thread), iSm, the James Bond series kept changing - with new actors playing Bond (and M, and Moneypenny, and Felix...) with the occasional reference to a previous adventure. While the movies were all basically standalone, there was a feeling of a series (albeit a sloppy one, I'll admit). We were always meeting Bond in the middle of his career - he always already had a reputation. The problem was, he was perpetually the same age, while the world around him changed. Was he a Cold War spy? An anti-terrorist? Yes, depending on when the movie was made. With Casino Royale, an attempt was made to start the series again. He's a new agent, just achieving his "Double-0" status. The next movie, Quantum of Solace (without making a value judgement) picked up the specific thread from the CR and continued the story. As far as Singer's Superman is concerned, I'd agree that it's a tenuous reboot, as it's more a sequel to Superman II. While it erased the timeline after the second Reeve movie, it didn't restart the story... interesting point.
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#8 |
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Kink of Swank
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Casino Royale's interesting, too, because for the first time a new actor playing Bond was supposed to be a new (or the very first) Bond, but in the same film "M" was suppose to be a continuation character. Oddball stuff.
Or should I say, "Oddjob stuff?" |
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#9 |
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8/30/14 - Disneyland -10k or Bust.
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So perhaps what really sets a reboot apart is that it breaks with existing canon. A fresh start that may or may not be at the beginning of the overall story.
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#10 | |
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I Floop the Pig
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Quote:
Hmm, perhaps Singer's Superman is better described as "restore from last known good" than "reboot".
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'He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.' -TJ |
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