Old Man TV: Buck Rogers Movie In The Works At Legendary & potential ANIME spin off UPDATE: George Clooney!!

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
@fonzerrillii @woodchuck @ViCiouS @largebillsonlyplease @ansatsusha_gouki @gene cisco

Buck Rogers Movie In The Works At Legendary
Buck Rogers - the 20th Century classic about a hero transported to the 25th Century - is back for a feature film reboot from Legendary Entertainment.

BY SCOTT CHERNOFF3 HOURS AGO

Buck-Rogers-TV-show-poster.jpg


A new Buck Rogers movie is in the works at Legendary Pictures. In the 20th Century, Buck Rogers was a sci-fi pop culture phenomenon, telling tales of a hero transported forward in time to the 25th Century. Making his debut in 1928, Buck Rogers took off a year later with a comic strip in news papers. The popularity of the comic spawned a slew of toys, books, radio plays, and a series of movie serials starring Buster Crabbe. In 1979, looking to appeal to Star Wars fans, NBC launched a TV show that ran for two seasons, with Gil Gerard portraying Buck Rogers.

But since then, the franchise has mostly laid dormant - though not for lack of trying.

In 2008, comics creator-turned filmmaker Frank Miller (Sin City) was set to adapt Buck Rogers, but the project never ended up happening. Then, in 2010, Paul W.S. Anderson (Alien vs. Predator, the Resident Evil movies) was brought aboard to direct a 3D Buck Rogers movie from a script by Art Marcum and Matt Holloway (Iron Man, the upcoming Uncharted). That attempt fizzled out too. Meanwhile, Legendary Entertainment came along, finding huge success with blockbuster franchises like Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy, the Jurassic World films, and the recent Godzilla and Kong movies, to name just a few.

Now, Legendary has stepped up to revive Buck Rodgers for a new generation. THR reports that Legendary has put the finishing touches on a long-in-the-works deal that calls for rebooting Buck Rogers as a big-budget, big screen adventure, with an eye toward spinning off into an anime series and "a prestige television series." Don Murphy (Real Steel, the Transformers franchise) will produce with his wife and Angry Films partner Susan Montford.

So far, no writer or director has been attached to the new Buck Rogers. Just getting the deal done was apparently a huge achievement, as the rights had been tied up in legal battles for years, with producer Murphy claiming the title had entered the public domain, which was disputed by heirs to the publisher who put the first Rogers stories in his magazine. But now that the parties have reached a legal settlement, it's full steam ahead into the 21st Century for the faded American icon.

It's an interesting development, because Buck Rogers was among the last major titles from American pop culture of the 20th Century to not get folded into Disney, Warner Bros., or any other corporate entity, making it ripe to fulfill its full franchise potential. But at this point, with the futuristic property largely a thing of the past and unknown by fans too young to remember the cheesy but beloved 1979-81 NBC series, it's fair to wonder if Buck Rogers was worth all that legal effort. If the aim is to produce a movie where the hero wakes up in the distant future, it might have made more sense to make a new story. It'll be interesting to see if moviegoers will take that trip into the future with Buck Rogers - or not.

 
Last edited:
Buck Rogers To Return in New Big Screen Reboot
Classic space swashbuckler Buck Rogers is going to blast his way back into the movies.

By Don Kaye|October 14, 2020|
|8
Photo: NBC
The classic space opera hero Buck Rogers is coming back, according to The Wrap. Legendary Entertainment (Godzilla: King of the Monsters) has snagged the movie rights to the 92-year-old character, with producers Don Murphy (Transformers) and Susan Montford set to steer the project through Murphy’s Angry Films production company.
Buck Rogers brought sci-fi elements like ray guns, rocket ships, lasers and jet packs into popular culture, with the property’s vision of the future and emphasis on action and adventure influencing everything from Disney’s Tomorrowland attraction to George Lucas’ original concept for Star Wars.
The movie will bring Buck all the way back to his roots by adapting Armageddon 2419 A.D., the 1928 novella in which the character made his debut. Written by Philip Francis Nowlan and published in the iconic pulp fiction magazine Amazing Stories, the tale follows the adventures of Anthony Rogers, a World War I veteran who is investigating strange phenomena in an abandoned Pennsylvania coal mine for his company, the American Radioactive Gas Corporation, when he is trapped by a cave-in.
Exposed to radioactive gas, Rogers falls into suspended animation and reawakens 492 years later in the 25th century. What used to be the United States of America is now ruled by the Hans (i.e. the Chinese), who conquered the U.S. nearly 400 years earlier using fleets of airships armed with disintegration rays. Rogers joins a local “gang” and, using strategies he learned in the Great War, manages to help score a victory against the Hans and pave the way for a future reclamation of America.
AD

AD – CONTENT CONTINUES BELOW

A sequel to the original story, The Airlords of Han, appeared in the March 1929 issue of Amazing Stories, but the character, renamed Buck, really took off with the debut in January of that year of a daily syndicated comic strip. The strip ended up in some 287 U.S. newspapers at its peak, along with 160 international outlets.
It wasn’t until a year after the comic strip premiered, in January 1930, that Rogers first made his way into space in a story called “Tiger Men from Mars.” That in turn paved the way for the franchise’s turn toward space opera, even as it branched into radio in 1932 (making it the first sci-fi program to ever air on the radio), a 12-part movie serial in 1939 and, later, more comics, books, toys and video games.

























Although there was a short-lived Buck Rogers TV series during the 1950-51 season, it was revived in 1979 by NBC after the pilot was released theatrically to good box office. Starring Gil Gerard as Buck and produced by Glen A. Larson (Battlestar Galactica), Buck Rogers in the 25th Century ran for two seasons and introduced a new generation to the venerable hero, this time as a NASA pilot who flies his ship through an anomaly in space and is left drifting in the void for 500 years until he awakens to defend Earth against the forces of the planet Draconia and other menaces.


Top ArticlesWhy The Haunting of Bly Manor Needed aBritish Script Editor | Den of Geek


READ MORE
READ MOREREAD MOREREAD MOREREAD MORE





SKIP AD



AD

Although a movie was announced as far back as 2008 with Frank Miller writing and directing, legal issues kept the franchise in limbo for the better part of the next decade. With Legendary now obtaining the rights, the plan is to launch a film franchise, a TV series and an animated component.
 
Legendary Hopes a Buck Rogers Reboot Film Can Lead to...an Anime Series Spinoff

Charles Pulliam-Moore
Yesterday 6:35PM

Filed to:LEGENDARY
82
1


Box art from Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.Image: NBC Universal
At any given point in time, there are dozens of would-be cinematic adaptations of classic properties that are either caught up in production hell, or trapped in a battle over the rights as to who gets to make money off which specific characters. Take, for example, Buck Rogers.



According to the Hollywood Reporter, after years-long negotiations over the rights to the Buck Rogers franchise, Legendary, the same studio behind the new Dune and Godzilla movies, has hammered out a deal giving it the ability to tell stories about the unsuspecting Rogers—a man born in the late 19th century who mysteriously wakes up in the 25th century after being exposed to radioactive gas during an accident.
Rogers’ experience fighting in World War I prepares him for the strange, dystopian future he awakens in, and is ultimately what helps him become the legendary warrior who’s already been the centerpiece of serial films, books, and television shows.
The New Buck Rogers Movie Will Be Based on His Most Classic Story Ever
When you think about Buck Rogers, you probably think of a scifi character that’s basically been…
Read more
Per the Hollywood Reporter, Legendary envisions a future in which a big budget Buck Rogers cinematic reboot is successful enough to launch a follow-up “prestige television series” as well as an anime series (specifically anime and not just animated). That sounds like exactly the sort of multi-platform plan a studio would make years in advance, without fully knowing just how much public interest there is in any sort of Buck Rogers media in the 21st century.


Top ArticlesHere's What The PS5's UI Looks Like


READ MORE
READ MOREREAD MOREREAD MOREREAD MOREREAD MORE





SKIP AD



Aside from listing Don Murphy and Susan Montford as slated producers for the would-be Buck Rogers film, there aren’t any concrete details about what Legendary might be thinking of in terms of how to rework the story for a modern day audience, much less who might director or star in the project.
Even bigger picture, though: this news comes at a time when Hollywood’s still effectively stopped production due to the covid-19 pandemic and movie theaters have no idea when they might open again. By announcing its plans to do...something with Buck Rogers, Legendary’s managed to get everyone thinking about the character again for at least a few days. But whether the studio will be able to sustain the public’s interest in these plans in the future is as yet unknown.
 
Erin Grey + Spandex = must-see TV.
Looka here. I wanted to do some sinful things with Erin Grey back in the day.
Wow! Shit bought back mad memories. Erin Gray was so hot when you are 13yrs old. LMAO
MANNN,,, WHAT YOU TALKING 'BOUT!!! Between her and Linda Carter....Umm, Umm, Umm



hold on ya'll aint like...

princess-ardala-wallpapers_16964_1024x768.jpg


ebed795e25bce1b7683ad5b64c7bf25fefe4148e.gifv


d22e73a920f8c6f5b46d6ae1636d2f093526009f.gifv


 
Back
Top