On the Buffy remake. And creating/sustaining an evolving mythology.

May 27, 2009 18:56

In case you haven't heard, there's been talk of a Buffy reboot in the form of a movie franchise that's going to keep the core idea of the 1992 movie, and go with that premise but reimagine it. As suspected, fandom is not happy ( Read more... )

pop culture, mythology, buffy, joss whedon, fandom, meta

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prozacpark May 28 2009, 00:30:17 UTC
I generally tend to think Joss is a one-trick pony, but Buffy is that trick for me. I think everything he's done since then has either been full of Gender Fail, a repeat of Buffy themes, or just not that good, period.

But Buffy is mythology, in its structure. You can choose to not think of it as such in terms of how influential it is, but Joss did create a self-aware and a female version of the popular Classical hero myths. And we see echoes of this even within the show, where Buffy gets to live many lives and gets to die and come back, etc. And ultimately, that's a huge part of its appeal for me.

And just because Buffy hasn't rebooted so far doesn't mean it shouldn't? We have it existing in different forms, narratives, and alternate verses already. It doesn't have that history of 40+ years behind it, but it's a relatively new canon.

I think we already got Joss's take on Buffy. Twice. It'd be interesting to see how someone who didn't create this concept approaches it?

Incidentally, one of the things I really wanted as a Buffy spin-off when it was ending was an anthology type of series with a series of mini-series about different slayers. So I may get behind "Taffy, the Vampire Slayer." But...I think where myths are concerned, names have...power, and I would not mind having the new Slayer still be a version of Buffy.

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