You provide no supporting arguments then act as though your mic-drop is sufficient to support your assertion. Why? What did Terminator 2 do that undermined the franchise? Too much humor? Negating the actions of the protagonists of the first film? Over emphasis on one liners and special effects? What?
And without the sequel, we wouldn't be talking about a "franchise" at all.
I prefer remakes, adaptations and homages to sequels... With a remake, the original is still there and often a popular remake encourages people to seek out the original...
Remakes also allow for experimenting with different parts of the story as well as, whether they are strict remakes or just homages that take their inspiration from the older films... E.g. A Perfect Murder as a remake of Dial M for Murder...
A sequel, tends to make a movie feel more like TV, the soap opera elements creep in fast and the meaning of the original stories can change... It is also lazier as people are less critical of sequels then they are of remakes... The bar is set lower...
It wasn't a franchise when this was made. This was just a sequel. Then along came the MCU and suddenly every studio was desperate after franchises.
Terminator 3 pre-dates the MCU, and Terminator Salvation went into production before the MCU films, Iron Man and To he Incredible Hulk, were released. So you can't possibly blame the attempt to turn Terminator into a franchise in the popularity of the MCU.
It is not as if the MCU is the first ever franchise, Star Wars and Rocky films, not to mention James Bond, proved franchises could be highly profitable decades before the MCU.
It is not as if the MCU is the first ever franchise, Star Wars and Rocky films
Several Joel Silver films from The 80s all take place in the same universe also. Commando, Die Hard 2, Predator, and arguably the first couple of Lethal Weapon movies all take place in a shared cinematic universe. It's just a shame that we never got to see Martin Riggs or Bruce Willis square off against The Predator
Dude, that would actually have been really cool if that happened in the 80s or 90s. I'd prefer that to any Predator movie we've had since the first or any of the Expendables films.
¿No encuentras una película o serie? Inicia sesión para crearla:
Contestado por tmdb53400018
el 25 de enero de 2018 a las 17:34
Then, maybe it shouldn't have been a franchise at all.
Contestado por tmdb82469342
el 26 de enero de 2018 a las 04:55
Maybe you're right.
Contestado por jomarthecat
el 26 de enero de 2018 a las 09:41
It wasn't a franchise when this was made. This was just a sequel. Then along came the MCU and suddenly every studio was desperate after franchises.
Some movies should be just sequels. Not everything needs a cinematic universe.
Contestado por AlienFanatic
el 26 de enero de 2018 a las 12:52
You provide no supporting arguments then act as though your mic-drop is sufficient to support your assertion. Why? What did Terminator 2 do that undermined the franchise? Too much humor? Negating the actions of the protagonists of the first film? Over emphasis on one liners and special effects? What?
And without the sequel, we wouldn't be talking about a "franchise" at all.
Contestado por jomarthecat
el 26 de enero de 2018 a las 13:14
To clarify: I love the MCU. The way they have built their cinematic universe is unique in movie history. And it is just awesome.
But I hate that every other movie studio seems more concerned about building expanded universes than making good movies.
Contestado por Renovatio
el 26 de enero de 2018 a las 16:06
I prefer remakes, adaptations and homages to sequels... With a remake, the original is still there and often a popular remake encourages people to seek out the original...
Remakes also allow for experimenting with different parts of the story as well as, whether they are strict remakes or just homages that take their inspiration from the older films... E.g. A Perfect Murder as a remake of Dial M for Murder...
A sequel, tends to make a movie feel more like TV, the soap opera elements creep in fast and the meaning of the original stories can change... It is also lazier as people are less critical of sequels then they are of remakes... The bar is set lower...
Contestado por autoexec.batman
el 29 de octubre de 2019 a las 21:16
Terminator 3 pre-dates the MCU, and Terminator Salvation went into production before the MCU films, Iron Man and To he Incredible Hulk, were released. So you can't possibly blame the attempt to turn Terminator into a franchise in the popularity of the MCU.
It is not as if the MCU is the first ever franchise, Star Wars and Rocky films, not to mention James Bond, proved franchises could be highly profitable decades before the MCU.
Contestado por JustinJackFlash
el 22 de febrero de 2022 a las 10:28
Dude, that would actually have been really cool if that happened in the 80s or 90s. I'd prefer that to any Predator movie we've had since the first or any of the Expendables films.