So terrible it had 3 succesful seasons. Moving on!
Never said the show was terrible, just a bad example as Terry is nowhere near as interesting as Bruce. The show was good, but 10 times out of 10, I would've preferred to see Bruce Wayne as Batman, and I think most people would as well.
Does it need to be better?
I would like to think so. If it's not better or at least as good, why do it?
Too bad he's decades removed from the original one so thanks for proving my point
Alan Scott's GL is a completely different concept. For one, the ring is magic, and there's no GL Corp. Hal didn't take over from Scott. So no, I didn't prove your point. You might as well consider The Ghost Busters and The Ghostbusters the same. They have little resemblance beyond the ring.
One that was able to succesfly move past its initial iconic main character(s) and utilize other characters.
Simply because of the brand name. Episode 1 proves the point that you put Star Wars on pretty much anything and it will sell. Changing main characters was in NO WAY a risk. If they can do what they want, it's not a risk. The movies aren't better for having switched out the main cast. It can be objectively shown that the new movie is a rehash of the first. I don't care if the movies make bank, I want them to be good. These weren't for a number of reasons. I do think they would've been better had they not tried to move to the next generation who pale in comparison. It's the brand that sells at this point, not the characters.
in all cases their respective franchises didn't suffer a bit, on the contrary, they grew their universes and audience appeal. Box office, longetivity, number of TV seasons etc. all prove it. I don't care that you don't care or like these examples, they're facts regardless if it suits you or not.
Yes, Star Wars did suffer. Not monetarily, but storywise, the new movies suck. Rogue One is god awful and episode 7 is a rehash. Star Wars had no problem keeping it's iconic status well after the release of Return of the Jedi. So no, you haven't given me a fact. Plenty of shows go seasons after the main characters leave, but it doesn't mean for the better. Have you seen Happy Days or The X-Files after their main characters left?
This is NOT about box office or monetary success. Plenty of brands can move past the main character and remain monetarily profitable, but what does that prove other than people will watch terrible movies and TV shows if it is a brand name they once liked. The argument has always been about whether it was better for the story.
If you say so, ABED. To me, it just looks like you are bending yourself backwards just so that you don't say you prefer a different version than the original of a character. However, that's just what it looks like to me. If it really isn't so, then just disregard me.
Hal is not a different version of Alan Scott.
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