We’ll look each in a more general way, but I’ll still recap the story somewhat and talk about all the spoiler-y details. So I’m doing a fusion to cover all 3 today. It would be too much to do it for all 3 movies, and honestly there’s less to say in a recap format in most of these. Including one thing I brought up before and oh man we’ll get into that.įor this review, I won’t be fully doing the proper scene by scene thing. And the actual product is quite interesting with what it does with the material. As the series did trilogies, it’s interesting they chose to take from those. As someone who read and reviewed their fair share of these, I’ve been interested in this project forever. There was some more mixed reactions in places, such as from the book fans and we’ll explore all that we go. And it’s still taking over the subreddit, that’s the biggest by product of it frankly. There were people on Twitter making it their personality for the month and everything. Anyway, they came out this summer to pretty solid success and good reviews. You gotta wonder how this would have done in theaters though. They were basically planning a binge experience, so it’s weird it wasn’t meant for streaming to begin with. In other words, we missed out on Disney’s Fear Street twice! But then they made a deal with Netflix, so the announcement that these would now go there didn’t come as a big surprise to me. This left some of their movies, including these, with nowhere to go. They mostly made things with Fox but after Disney bought Fox, they cut them off as they wanted to focus on franchises and they prefer to self finance their movies. See, Chernin Entertainment was also part of this. It was slated for Summer 2020, with the films being all shot in 2019, but for obvious reasons, that couldn’t happen.īut there was more to it than that. Then in 2017 they announced their big plan, that it would be a trilogy of films to be released only a month part. After that fell through, it was silent until 2015 when they officially announced that Fox was making a film. That was around when the series started to fizzle out, so it was a bit late. Interestingly, the article on that says they planned to do novelizations for the possible film, and they mentioned the chance of a theme park attraction at Walt Disney World in Orlando. The first attempt for the main series was in 1997, when Hollywood Pictures, a Disney company, acquired the rights. They did try with the Ghosts of Fear Street show, which didn’t get past a pilot, and said pilot was…interesting, as you’ll recall from ages ago. It’s still managed to stick around but hasn’t had as much luck with adaptations. I get it, since it’s harder to milk a series that lacks marketable monsters like Goosebumps has. After all, it got a head start and tons of entries between the various spin offs. Stine for, Fear Street is wildly successful in its own right. While Goosebumps always be the main thing people know R.l. With it, we go back to the world of Fear Street. This was a good place to it and I didn’t want to stop at Halloween Night II after all. Sorry for those who don’t care about this stuff. This time we’re doing something.different, a bit of ambition for me to fit with am ambitious project.Īnd with it is also a second helping of R.L. However, this is our offical Halloween scene by scene review for the year…sort of. That and the offical Halloween post will be something else. Well, actually that’s not til next week but we’re close enough. Three movies, three weeks, one long review.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |