- Joined
- Dec 21, 2002
- Messages
- 22,742
- Real Name
- Jake Lipson
Deadline has this news.
https://deadline.com/2018/10/pirate...tt-reese-paul-wernick-johnny-depp-1202488160/
Details are pretty vague, basically all we know I put in the thread title, but the word "reboot" would at least suggest that this will be a break from the continuity established in the existing films.
Given the PR nightmare that Johnny Depp has become recently, I can't imagine Disney wanting to continue employing him, as his alleged misdeeds are far more significant than old tweets. The most recent Pirates film did $794m worldwide last year, but only $172m of that was from North America, which is a low point by a significant margin.
I wonder though: even if they throw out all the continuity from the previous films, is this still a property people will care to go see in a new iteration? I used to be a huge fan of it, but it feels like they've run it into the ground. And even if the answer is yes, is it wise to reboot it so soon after the fifth film in the initial run?
Disney has a lot of things working for them right now -- the live-action remakes, Marvel, and Star Wars (mostly, except for Solo.) Pirates just feels like a franchise that was big for them before they had all of those things but might not be as important now as when it was first created.
Thought?
https://deadline.com/2018/10/pirate...tt-reese-paul-wernick-johnny-depp-1202488160/
Details are pretty vague, basically all we know I put in the thread title, but the word "reboot" would at least suggest that this will be a break from the continuity established in the existing films.
Given the PR nightmare that Johnny Depp has become recently, I can't imagine Disney wanting to continue employing him, as his alleged misdeeds are far more significant than old tweets. The most recent Pirates film did $794m worldwide last year, but only $172m of that was from North America, which is a low point by a significant margin.
I wonder though: even if they throw out all the continuity from the previous films, is this still a property people will care to go see in a new iteration? I used to be a huge fan of it, but it feels like they've run it into the ground. And even if the answer is yes, is it wise to reboot it so soon after the fifth film in the initial run?
Disney has a lot of things working for them right now -- the live-action remakes, Marvel, and Star Wars (mostly, except for Solo.) Pirates just feels like a franchise that was big for them before they had all of those things but might not be as important now as when it was first created.
Thought?