What Franchises Are Left?


With this movie destroying the Indiana Jones franchise, how many iconic film franchises are still left? Star Wars was destroyed, Jurassic Park was destroyed, No Time to Die ruined James Bond, The Matrix destroyed, Rambo was ruined by Last Blood, Die Hard 5 ruined Die Hard, Alien has been destroyed, Harry Potter ruined by Fantastic Beasts, Terminator completely butchered, Toy Story was ruined by Toy Story 4, etc.

Mission Impossible is still good, but for how long? They didn’t ruin LOTR yet, but I assume they will. Back to the Future is safe, but for how long? Why is Hollywood obsessed with destroying classic franchises?

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Mission Impossible was never good.

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Troll or just a fucking idiot?

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Neither. Just tired of artificial looking computer/green screen stunts. And then some people make a fuss of how Tom Cruise makes his own stunts... gimme a break.

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confirmed troll, lol

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Mission Impossible 3 is great. The rest are bloated action CGI extravaganzas no different than 99% of the other action films being made today.

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Did you know Tom Cruise is actually a CGI made character? Not a real life person at all.

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For the longest time I had only seen the first Mission Impossible movie, and didn't bother with the rest because the first one was just an ok movie. It was only last year that I sat down and watched the rest on Prime, and other than an underwhelming MI2, they were really great. The stunts in MI4 in particular gave me butterflies, something I haven't experienced from a movie in many, many years - and I was watching on my laptop. And why? Because it was done with actual stunts, not CGI. I was kicking myself for not watching these movies sooner.

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I saw the first movie in theater, but didn't bother with the rest. I have seen them on television, and they didn't impress me at all. Scenes like Cruise inside a helicopter while its been crushed in Fallout just made me want to turn the movie off. Mission Impossible is and always will be a franchise I don't get. Just like Fast and Furious movies. Or Transformers. But then again, I've learned a long time ago already that anything that Tom Cruise does is most likely a waste of time for me.

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You both are idiots. MI is excellent and all the sequels have not ruined franchises. Anyone who thinks that is a cynical old fat ass... 😂

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I don't like MI movies, but the fans genuinely seem to enjoy the sequels. Unlike other series, these tend to be appreciated without critics and fans saying that it betrays the character or lore.

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Critics just go with whatever public opinion is at the time. Look at how they rated John Wick. They said one of the best action movies ever or best ever... I kept hearing it. 😂 It's not one of the best action movies ever. Or even one of the best. They loved KOTCS. Fans didn't so much. So I don't know maybe they played it safe with this one. Fans seem to like it a bit more than 4.

At any rate MI still has the same lead and supporting cast. They haven't had 15 or more years between films. So its a bit different in that regard. Give it a 15 year break. Bring back Cruise at 76 and I bet people rip on it no matter the quality.

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That's an interesting point. A surprising aspect of Cruise is that he's older than John Voight was back in 96. He must be doing something right.

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That just blew my mind what you said there.

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I can't remember any of the plots of the Mission Impossible movies. Not memorable means not good.

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Smells like both.

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I find it rich and ironic that everyone complains about Hollywod "tearing down our male icons" when the first Mission Impossible did it decades ago with the Jim Phelps character. What they did to Phelps in that film was far, far worse than anything done to Han Solo or Luke or Willow later. Granted, he was played by a different actor in the movie, but it was still the same character. He was turned into a traitor and buried along with his legacy. The complaints about vintage characters beyond trashed in the name of relaunching a franchise are justifiable in most cases, but not Indy 5 in my humble opinion (but more on that later). I'm just pointing out the inconsistency.

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Jim Phelps character was a male icon :D Wtf?

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Well, most viewers hadn't seen the original series so thus probably didn't give a shit. A fan of the orignal show might not see it that way. I personally wasn't a fan of the show or the movies, but my brother is a fan of the show so that's how I know.

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Even if we grant that he is a male icon and was destroyed, 1 old example is hardly enough to discredit the criticism people have about modern Hollywood"tearing down our male icons."

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It doesn't invalidate your points on modern movies, but we are where we are in part because franchise won't be allowed to rest in peace. We are always looking for gimmicks to relaunch older franchises and not coming up with new ideas. I'mnot surprised it's finally come to this point. Gender and race swapping is but an extreme ultimate manifestation of trends that go back quite a ways. And having the young make way for the old is the natural order of things. Sometimes it was done respectfully and sometimes not. In this case I feel MI: 1was not respectful to the Jim character and didn't feel that Dial was disrespectful to Indy, but your still right about a lot of modern movies. Ripley from Alien was somewhat of a gender swap but felt more natural.. The question is why? The key difference is we aren't merely age swapping one older male for a younger male (respectfully or not) which is a biological necessity, whereas today the swaps involved sex, gender, race, etc.) which are dictated by things other than age which feel more arbitrary and forced than natural. Another problem is the hamfisted and unsubtle way in which female and or non-white characters are presented (oten accompanied by a lot of lecturing) that puts people off. It can theoretical be done well but often isn't. It is simply done too often and with too little grace or humility. Mission Impossible may have done Jim dirty, but at least it didn't spend the entire film dunking on older people in general.




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The original Mission Impossible TV series mostly relied on an ensemble cast. My personal favorites were Martin Landau’s and Greg Morris’s characters but Peter Grave’s Phelps was the leader of the group and if you had to pick a single main character it was him.

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It's been awhile since I've seen the first MI, but I don't think that they emasculated Jim Phelps. Compare it to, say, Luke Skywalker chunking his lighsaber, sucking off an alien manatee, and getting killed via a project image duel. The latter is more along the lines of what people have in mind regarding "tearing down our male icons."

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You have seen the end of MI haven't you? Because what you are saying is way off the mark, in fact the VERY last scene has him back in action and contradicts everything you said.

But it's easy to see you're trying to gaslight a false-equivalence in order to protect this film. Which is hilarious :).

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"You have seen the end of MI haven't you?"
Yes. I just rewatched it for the first time since it was jn theaters.

"Because what you are saying is way off the mark,
Jim fakes his own death and comes back at the end, totally vindicating my memory of the film.

"in fact the VERY last scene has him back in action and contradicts everything you said."
No it doesn't.. It shows him as being killed In the helicopter crash in the Chunnel.

"But it's easy to see you're trying to gaslight a false-equivalence in order to protect this film. Which is hilarious :)."
What's hilarious is that you bald-faced lied about how the Jim Phelps character was treated, falsely accuse me of gaslighting, when in fact it's you who is lying and gaslighting. By the way, speaking of "false equivalency", or you seriously maintaining that feminism is a greater sin for a character to commit than treason and murder? If so, that's a very interesting - and revealing - take.

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"You have seen the end of MI haven't you?"
Yes. I just rewatched it for the first time since it was jn theaters.

"Because what you are saying is way off the mark,
Jim fakes his own death and comes back at the end, totally vindicating my memory of the film.

"in fact the VERY last scene has him back in action and contradicts everything you said."
No it doesn't.. It shows him as being killed In the helicopter crash in the Chunnel.

"But it's easy to see you're trying to gaslight a false-equivalence in order to protect this film. Which is hilarious :)."
What's hilarious is that you bald-faced lied about how the Jim Phelps character was treated, falsely accuse me of gaslighting, when in fact it's you who is lying and gaslighting. By the way, speaking of "false equivalency", are you seriously maintaining that feminism is a greater sin for a character to commit than corruption, treason and murder? If so, that's a very interesting - and revealing - take.

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I'm just confirming that you are talking about the first MI movie as mentioned in your earlier post?

Are you positive you haven't watched a bootleg version of the film because the 'VERY last scene' in the film is definitely NOT him 'as being killed In the helicopter crash in the Chunnel.' (... tunnel?).

The very last scene is him in flight on a plane and being handed an obvious mission tape ... meaning he is back in action as an agent for IMF with his name cleared, like I said.

Also there are multiple sequels to the film with him still an IMF agent? Your comment and stance is weird.

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Channel Tunnel = Chunnel (that's what they called it back then)
How could he be "back in action" if he's a traitor?

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Because IMF captured Max (but work things out), and he receives a mission tape at the end during his flight meaning that obviously his name is cleared. In fact as it was Jim Phelps that was shown to receive the mission tapes this way which means Ethan potentially received a promotion.

Have you by chance seen any of the other MI films, because he is very much an IMF agent in those, including M2 which is the very next film.

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I felt the same way at the time. They co opted the title and music of the show which was primarily about using confidence tricks and subterfuge to achieve a mission goal and turned it into a big action movie while undermining the main character of the show by having him do something completely out of character so they could pass the baton to a new character.

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I never cared for the first one after they undermined the Jim Phelps character by making him a traitor.

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Someone above denied that it happened that way. I've only seen MI 1 once, but I remember it that way and so do my brother and his friend who also saw it back then. I was right, wasn't I?

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That’s how I remember it. I debated it with a friend at the time.

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So, the person accusing me of "gaslighting" is actually a gaslighter. Wow, what a shocker. Also, I never said Jim Phelps was emasculated, but that in some ways he was treated worse than that.

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Maaaan not even the first one? Or the orginal series?

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They didn’t ruin LOTR yet

Seems someone missed The Rings of Power...

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I was just about to say that.

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Back to the Future is safe, but for how long?


Until Robert Zemeckis dies... literally.



With this movie destroying the Indiana Jones franchise, how many iconic film franchises are still left?


They will dig up the corpses of cult classics like Howard The Duck and Smokey and the Bandit just to ruin them.

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Smokey and the Bandit ruined itself with the third one and the FOUR made for TV sequels.

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Aha, see... I never watched the third or or the made for TV sequels. I guess I'll just stay away from them!

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Fast & Furious still proving more profitable than the entire Daniel Craig run as James Bond.

That's not to be sniffed at...

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Fast and Furious has sucked donkey balls since 7 and onwards... 😂

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Excellent case in point. 2015's respective box offices:-

Furious 7: $1.515b
Spectre: $880.7m

Irrespective of personal opinion F&F towers over Bond at the Box Office and - as per the OP - remains undestroyed.

Thanks.

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Happily Box office doesn't denote quality of film. Though I haven't been a fan of new James bond for a long while. Craig did ok but Bond films need to cease now.

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Happily Box office doesn't denote quality of film.

Absolutely agree but that's not the OP was discussing.

He mentioned Bond and other franchises being "destroyed". I was just referencing what is a superior performing franchise and pointing out that it hadn't been ruined as yet.

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Good question I don't think there are any major franchises left to ruin unless they reboot a reboot or something like that.

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Pirates of the Caribbean

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Aren't they making another one?

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Seems so, but there isn't much information available as yet.

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I guess I thought you meant the franchise had not already been messed with.

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Yes, at least it hasn't been yet.

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Well, wasn't the fifth one kind of like that? It wasn't terrible or anything, but a big step down and stretching out the series.

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It was, but the franchise wasn't destroyed, at least not completely, that is why a new one is coming out.

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Ah, I know what you mean.

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Indiana Jones was already destroyed with Crystal Skull. Even more shockingly it was destroyed by its own creators Spielberg and Lucas.

Studios don’t care as long as it makes the money but what Hollywood really needs is new good film franchises like John Wick. Heck even as much as I don’t care much for the Avatar films at least Cameron has made his own franchise instead of just ruining iconic franchises.

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What you are witnessing...before your very eyes...is the capitalistic/cannibalistic nature of Hollywood that accelerated in the 80s.

There were always sequels and series in the movies. From the 30s through the 60s, there were multiple Thin Man movies, Andy Hardy movies, Charlie Chan movies, Mr. Moto movies, Francis the Talking Mule movies, etc. There was Son of Kong(not a patch on the original) and Bride of Frankenstein.

But major classics and hits were rarely sequelled. There was no imperative to make a Gone With the Wind 2, or a Casablanca 2, or a Bridge on the River Kwai 2 or a Ben-Hur 2 or Lawrence of Arabia 2. It just wasn't done. Movies were meant to be respected as "stand alone works of art" and most movies told a "great story with an ending that should be left alone."

I would say that things changed, historically, with Godfather Part II in 1974. The same director(Francis Coppola) made the film as the original. It won the Best Picture Oscar, like the original. For once, a "quality classic" got a sequel and of Oscar quality.

The next sequel that kicked it was "The Empire Strikes Back" following the Number One grosser of all time to that time..Star Wars(which pretty clearly ended with the door open FOR a sequel.)

And that was it. The movie studios in the 80s were taken over largely by people from the TV industry, who knew from series and spin offs and re-doing things over and over and over and only stopped when...properties stopped making money.

Add in corporate takeovers of the movie studios in general -- and the co-opting of Hollywood by Silicon Valley(why do you think so many movies are computer-driven?) -- and here we are.

These franchises will be made over and over and over again, with new casts and directors, past our lifetimes and into the lifetimes of coming generations. Whether or not the movies are "good movies" (or star an 80-year old action hero) really doesn't matter.

PS. I might be instructive to consider "when was the last time that an original idea was made as a movie" that became a franchise.

John Wick in 2014, maybe?

Going way back:

James Bond 1962
Star Wars 1977
Indiana Jones 1981
The Terminator 1984
Jurassic Park 1993
The Fast and the Furious 2001

Batman and Superman predated their origin movies by decades, the Marvel heroes maybe a few decades less (the 60s versus the 30s.)

Will somebody out there ever come up with a NEW franchise origin movie, or are we doomed to the same characters for another 100 years?

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I guess it is hard to PLAN a new franchise. Just make a good movie and it will have its sequel. Make also the sequel good and you come to franchise territory. And usually they fail with the 3rd one (Godfather III, Jurassic Parc III, and - yeah - Pirates of the Caribbean III). It's not easy to satisfy the all the time growing expectations of the audience.

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What you are witnessing...before your very eyes...is the capitalistic/cannibalistic nature of Hollywood that accelerated in the 80s.

This is very true. I guess it's only a matter of time before they start reviving old franchises relying almost entirely on deepfake technology, using none of the original actors; just their likeness. We know the technology will one day be there to do it convincingly - the only obstacles are ethical and legal. But if those obstacles were to be overcome, I think it's only a matter of time before we see actors rising from the dead. We have already seen it to some extent in Rogue One.

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I guess it is hard to PLAN a new franchise. Just make a good movie and it will have its sequel.

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That's right. Its a rather "sad" formula: no classic REALLY stands alone anymore, if it is a hit. The Godfather COULD have stopped right there. But we got Godfather II. Jaws could have(and SHOULD HAVE) stopped right there, but we got Jaws 2, 3D and 4 (Steven Spielberg had no control over those mostly cheapjack movies, he made sure his later movies had sequel rights for him.)

A bit of a shock -- that has since been repeated -- was when Psycho -- an "old movie" of 1960 -- got a sequel in 1983! 23 years later! That was pretty outrageous at the time. They waited for Psycho director Alfred Hitchcock to die first(in 1980) and then went to town on his biggest hit.

In 1986, they did a sequel to the 1961 movie The Hustler -- The Color of Money with a much older Paul Newman -- and he won the Best Actor Oscar for the SEQUEL! (Under Scorsese's direction.) Paul Newman was a much higher level of Psycho star Anthony Perkins, but in both cases, the actors were iconic...a "blast from the past."

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Make also the sequel good and you come to franchise territory.

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Yep. I recall that Disney launched the first "Pirates of the Caribbean" and another "ride" movie -- The Haunted Mansion(with Eddie Murphy) the same year. Pirates scored big. The Haunted Mansion flopped and there was no franchise (though whaddya know, 20 years later, this very summer -- they are trying again.)

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And usually they fail with the 3rd one (Godfather III, Jurassic Parc III, and - yeah - Pirates of the Caribbean III).

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3rd time is rarely a charm.

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It's not easy to satisfy the all the time growing expectations of the audience.

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Its also hard to hit home runs three times at bat.

CONT

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What you are witnessing...before your very eyes...is the capitalistic/cannibalistic nature of Hollywood that accelerated in the 80s.

This is very true. I guess it's only a matter of time before they start reviving old franchises relying almost entirely on deepfake technology, using none of the original actors; just their likeness.

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Yes. Harrison Ford looked good ENOUGH in this opening sequence to convince me that -- in another 10 years say, a "young Harrison Ford" can be ready to star in ANY movie as long as its action-based and low dialogue.

I've offered this for years: the "Hollywood movie industry" and ITS old-fashinoned special effects were long ago swallowed up by Silicon Valley. THAT's Hollywood right now -- and going into the rest of the 21st Century. Along with "indie-type films" to let some real actors really act.

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We know the technology will one day be there to do it convincingly - the only obstacles are ethical and legal. But if those obstacles were to be overcome, I think it's only a matter of time before we see actors rising from the dead. We have already seen it to some extent in Rogue One.

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The issue for some years has been "bringing dead stars back as new stars": Bogart, John Wayne, Marilyn Monroe, Steve McQueen. But perhaps new generations have no interest in THEM. Legal issues MIGHT be overcome if the Harrison Fords and Tom Cruise's of the business CONSENUALLY allow -- NOW -- their 40ish screen personas to keep starring in movies even as they hit 70, 80, 90...of course its too late for Ford now in some ways: his 70's are behing him.

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I "buried a lede" up there.

Though sequels of "important films" (and box office hits) took off in the 70s, when a reporter confronted George Lucas about turning movies into comic book serials with Star Wars and its sequels, he said "James Bond got there first, in the 60s."

Which was right. They tested the water with the very cheap Dr. No, spent some more money on From Russia With Love , exploded (Titanic-type grosses) with both Goldfinger and Thunderballand suddenly a new Bond movie was expected every YEAR back then(and then every two years, and now for decades whenever they can get them out.)

But people forget -- that "Goldfinger/Thunderball peak" actually started to DECLINE shortly thereafter. You Only Live Twice, with Connery, made less than the two before it; Connery quit, and then the George Lazenby On Her Majesty's Secret Service underperformed lower that the Connerys(good film it may have been.) All the American spy shows suddenly dropped in ratings or got kicked off the air -- The Man From UNCLE, The Wild Wild West, I Spy -- and the British "Avengers"(not to be confused with today's avengers) soon went off, too.

Bond was rescued for the 70's with Connery again(Diamonds Are Forever) and then Roger Moore in a series of spoof-like Bonds that referenced Shaft(Live and Let Die), Enter the Dragon(The Man With the Golden Gun), Jaws(The Spy Who Loved Me, complete with henchman CALLED Jaws) and Star Wars(Moonraker.) Other emergency actions were taken to revive Bond -- as rather a classic Sherlock Holmes figure for the ages -- and here we are.

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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
And usually they fail with the 3rd one (Godfather III, Jurassic Parc III, and - yeah - Pirates of the Caribbean III).
3rd time is rarely a charm.
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Indiana Jones itself is a notable exception. The THIRD film was better received than the second, and the trilogy went out with a bang.

Of course, then they had to screw THAT up by giving us the sub-par Indiana Jones 4 and 5, DECADES later...

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In the interest of accuracy, I have to point out that there was a Gone with the Wind sequel. It was called Scarlett, which started as a book in 1991, which then became a mini-series in 1994.

I don't blame you for not knowing about it. I don't think many people do.

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In the interest of accuracy, I have to point out that there was a Gone with the Wind sequel. It was called Scarlett, which started as a book in 1991, which then became a mini-series in 1994.

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Well, whaddya know!

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I don't blame you for not knowing about it. I don't think many people do.

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I most certainly never heard of it. Thank you.

I suppose the issue here is that somebody decided to sequel Gone with the Wind over 50 years after it was made. There was no intention to make a sequel of it in the 40s(it was a 1939 release.)

That beats Psycho II -- which was 23 years after the original.

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Yes, and I suppose that's a whole other line of discussion, regarding sequels, prequels etc. that are created without the involvement of the original creator. A recent textbook example is the Rings of Power series, which turned into a terrible debacle.

Here's an interesting bit on Wiki about the Scarlett book:

"Reviewing the novel for The New York Times in 1991, Janet Maslin said the book was a 'stunningly uneventful 823-page holding action.' Donald McCaig, author of Rhett Butler's People, said it was his impression that the Margaret Mitchell estate was 'thoroughly embarrassed' by Scarlett. Scarlett, universally panned by critics, nevertheless was a commercial success. The book sold millions of copies and remains in print.

"When discussing the possibility of his own works receiving authorized sequels after his death, A Song of Ice and Fire author George R. R. Martin called such books 'abominations, to my mind, like [...] Scarlett, the [...] Gone With the Wind sequel'."

I know that the mini-series that resulted in 1994 varies considerably from the book, but I haven't seen it. It has a 6.3 on IMDB, which is not terrible, so maybe it's actually worth watching. . .?

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Donald McCaig, author of Rhett Butler's People, said it was his impression that the Margaret Mitchell estate was 'thoroughly embarrassed' by Scarlett. Scarlett, universally panned by critics, nevertheless was a commercial success. The book sold millions of copies and remains in print.

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That is a key issue, here. Movie fans of a certain type -- call them "experts" or "scholars" or "cineastes"(a fancy word, not sure what it means -- would believe that Gone With the Wind should NEVER have gotten a sequel, and clearly it was not a sequel with Clark Gable or Vivien Leigh or Leslie Howard in it(they were all dead -- only Olivia deHavilland was alive then.) At least Psycho II had both Anthony Perkins and Vera Miles from the original.

But the book sold millions of copies and remains in print and maybe the TV movie got good ratings.

That's all that REALLY matters to the studios and the publishing houses, at the end of the day. Makin' money. And they can say: "Its not just US. Customers BOUGHT this product."

(Popular) art vs. commerce.

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Certainly the studios care about money first and foremost. I wouldn't say that they never care about art but for them undoubtedly they place an emphasis on the BUSINESS part of the movie business.

I would agree that Gone with the Wind should've never gotten a sequel. That said, I'm kind of curious about the mini-series. I looked on RT and it has exactly zero ratings, not even one score from critics or audiences. But I poked around and found that it's streaming for free on a few different services and so I'm going to start episode one and see how it goes.

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I never saw it but I remember when that TV movie came out. If I remember correctly Joanne Whalley played Scarlett.

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That is correct, yes. I watched the first episode and have started the second. For a mid-90s TV mini-series it's pretty good so far. It seems only barely connected to the 1939 movie though and no effort was made to try to replicate the look or style of the film.

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Yes CS had a bad story and action sequences, but Indy wasn't a bad character in it.

In fact Indy's life had turned around by the end of it.

It wasn't a good movie though.

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Good point.

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