Monker wrote:Exactly...first time ever. It's becoming over-kill.
"Overkill" is an absolute. It is or it isn't. IMO, it is not, because this has never happened before. How many zombie movies have been made in the last 15 years? Or since
Night of the Living Dead? Nobody's bitching about overkill there. I know I'm not. How about all those movies that start with
Paranormal?
Monker wrote:Well, good thing I said, "around five..." because that only drops it down to six.
Three studios are releasing two movies apiece. Three studios, three separate universes. One genre. That's overkill?
You see, my point about this being the first time ever is that it's the first the CBM genre has been this prolific.
Monker wrote:First, you said scifi, not scifi/horror. Which are really two different genres. So are scifi/fantasy.
A slash means "and/or." The proper labels are SF-Horror (like
Alien) and Science Fantasy (like
John Carter).
Monker wrote:Twilight is fantasy even more than horror, but not scifi.
No, it's a bestselling YA series that clearly paved the way for the
other three, tonally speaking, and those are labeled "sci-fi." Anything "post-apocalyptic" falls under the SF banner. IMDb tags these movies as "adventure, drama, sci-fi" (it's last because it's alphabetical order, not because it's peripherally SF).
Monker wrote:The basic test - take out the "science" (if there even is any) in Twilight, and you still have the story. That means it is NOT scifi. Also, the way Twilight was released seemed modeled after Harry Potter, and Hunger Games followed the same pattern.
See, this is what you do: you like to emphasize the wrong part of the statement. You fetishize pontification. You glossed right over
The Hunger Games, Divergent and
The Maze Runner — they don't feature starships and lightsabers, but they're "Sci-Fi."
Monker wrote:When was the last time you had seven different big scifi movies planned for a year?
Planning is one thing. Stalling is another. Cameron's been threatening to dump
Avatar sequels on us for years, but for whatever reason, he hasn't gotten around to it. Now Robert Rodriguez has been tapped to direct
Battle Angel Alita, which is another project Cameron has been "planning" for years.
Monker wrote:You may get Hunger Games (which, IMO, is more fantasy than scifi anyway, but whatever) and something like Gravity. But, you don't see: Star Wars, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Lost In Space, and The Last Starfighter all released in the same year...not in recent memory anyway. If they were, I'd say the same thing about scifi.
You can scroll all the SF films of 2015 and 2014 right here. They don't all feature spaceships like
Interstellar, The Force Awakens, Jupiter Ascending and
The Martian, but they're categorically SF nonetheless:
http://movieweb.com/movies/2015/sci-fi/Monker wrote:If Rogue One dies, I wouldn't be surprised if they back off a bit.
Don't bet on it. It's the "
Star Wars brand," just like the Marvel brand, that is going to make these movies rake it in at the box office. Even if
Rogue One doesn't make a gazillion dollaz, they're not going to "back off" at all. Remember, this is Disney we're talking about.
Monker wrote:When the last "Lost In Space" movie was released, it was supposed to relaunch the franchise as well...with new movies and a TV series. Didn't happen.
Because it SUCKED.
Monker wrote:Also, you have to add in Star Trek continuing their movie efforts.
I mentioned
STID so it was implied. I hope
Beyond is a fuckload better than
STID.
And the resurrection of the
Apes franchise, too. That's SF in my book.
Dawn's a great movie, much better than
Rise. Not perfect, but great.
Monker wrote:And, with Star Wars always comes BSG...and there has been talk of a BSG movie reboot even before the series ended...
Yeah, well, we'll have to wait and see if Bryan Singer finds the time, since he's the guy who wants to do it. Only I don't want him to do it. I think he's a very overrated director. Ron Moore's
BSG hit a lot of bumps in the road, but I loved that show. If that's where it stops — after
Blood & Chrome, that is — then that's where it stops. If they reboot it again, it may end up resembling
Star Wars. It's a concept that works better as a serial.
Monker wrote:Yep...and once the promotion starts for next summer's movies, it may take a LOT of steam away from both BvS and CA:CW. Following Star Wars, people may want to see that INSTEAD of another comic book movie....and that one is a big name that a lot of people have been waiting for.
I think is
Star Wars is overrated as fuck-all, but if that's the case, so be it. I don't think it'll necessarily diminish
BvS' or
CA:CW's thunder, though.
Monker wrote:verslibre wrote:Oh, yeah, since last year's Godzilla performed so decently (500M+ worldwide), the kaiju/giant monsters genre is alive and kicking. Kong: Skull Island is due next year, Godzilla 2 is scheduled in 2018, AND Toho Studios is doing their own Godzilla reboot. Gamera returns in 2017. I hope we still get Pacific Rim 2.
Yep...but, that is a separate genre that has been dead for decades and simply does NOT equate to what comic book movies are doing next year.
It hasn't been "dead for decades." Toho has made a ton of movies. They did decide to take a break after 2004's
Final Wars. Well, you're going to start seeing movies there.
King King vs. Godzilla looks to be a certainty after
Godzilla 2.
Monker wrote:I didn't say that scifi was "ignored". I said I would love to see scifi get five genre movies in one year.
What you mean is you want "space opera." You want swashbuckling in outer space. Starships, laser weapons, Death Stars. If you want to be general, you're getting that many science fiction movies a year. At least.
And you wanna know something?
Guardians of the Galaxy is both a CBM and a SF film. Specifically the kind you want to see, apparently.
Monker wrote:They don't dump movies in the Spring and expect them to be blockbusters.
That hasn't been the case for years. I commented on this a few pages ago.
Monker wrote:I am not arguing that comic book movies are killing other genres.
Are you sure? Subtext, subtext, subtext.
Monker wrote:I am saying comic book movies are committing suicide by saturating the market.
Other genres that do the same don't seem to be affected.
Monker wrote:verslibre wrote:There's this other SF movie that's gotten a lot of buzz: Ex Machina. Maybe you should watch it.
Meh. Looks stupid. So did CHAPPiE. Both Spring releases.
Now you sound like "Spring movie = suckfest." I doubt many people agree with that equation. And
Ex Machina has gotten a lot of positive buzz. It doesn't look like my kind of movie, but I'm not going to pretend I haven't read a lot of positive feedback about it.
Monker wrote:I would say the same about Seventh Son (and, it's FANTASY, not scifi).
Who said it was SF?
Monker wrote:verslibre wrote:Let's see. Another Narnia movie is coming. We've had two Tolkien trilogies that did massive business. And you know those movies based on those J.K. Rowling novels about a kid magician or something like that? The ones that did huge business? The spin-off is coming next year. How about the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise? That's "fantasy." The fifth, Dead Men Tell No Tales, comes out in 2017, and they're already writing the sixth.
LOL...so what. Five blockbusters in one year. You are taking series and spreading them out over years. Some of them are even over with. Fantasy is not saturating the market. It was close, but not quite there.
Here's where you can see all the films under the fantasy header that have been released in 2014-15:
http://movieweb.com/movies/2015/fantasy/Since we're generalizing, the list includes
Pan, Cinderella, The Last Witch Hunter, Seventh Son, Fallen, Maleficent, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies and so on. Lots of fantasy being produced. Maybe it's not all "Dark Fantasy" or "Heroic Fantasy" or "Fairy Tales," but when it comes to CBMs, we're not saying "Mutants," "Men in Tights," "Supernatural Superheroes," etc.
Monker wrote:verslibre wrote:How about all those animated films? They are legion. And they also cash in hugely. You know which ones.
Yep...what is your point?
The point is that a lot of them get made, they make a bunch of money, and nobody's complaining.
Monker wrote: It has nothing to do with DC.
Whatever you say.
