I think late 20th century sci-fi proves this is not true. Star Trek and Battle Star Galactica come to mind. Both were brought back and surpassed all previous incarnations.The Dark Knight wrote: Wed Mar 18, 2026 9:58 pm This pretty much applies to any series that's continued beyond its original ending...
There's just a limit to how far you can push any particular form, whether it be stories, or visuals, or music. That limit is in flux, it can change along with culture to some extent, but you will eventually hit it, and once you do it becomes little more than a museum.
Trek also happens to be a good example of this in modern day, it did come back and thrived in the 80's and 90's, but now it's the same thing. They've tried turning it into an epic drama, they've tried the Marvel formula, they've tried imitating the version of it that did work, and none of it hits. It has a good episode here and there but it's not impacting anything culturally on a serious level. Just temporary social media commentary followed by permanent irrelevance.

