The Guns of Firefly?

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Never say Never is definitely the by-word of Hollywood. If "Serenity" can move a few million units, then do it again when they double-dip with a unrated edition (you KNOW is it coming, Joss has mentioned it and heck, even dogs like "Club Dread", and "Not Another Teen movie" are getting directors cut nowadays), I would not be surprised to see a 30-ish million dollar movie come out.

The comics sold like mad (I'm trying to get one of each cover, got all but River...), and I suspect the books, if helmed by someone like Brust who has a modicum of writing talent and supervised by Wheedon/other Firefly writers, could really be good. The franchise has a RPG out, and I think a collectable card series. There are dolls (ahem, action figures!), and if a decent Firefly model comes out, I'm all over it (Reaverized with that dorsal cannon, naturally).
 
jason10mm said:
and I suspect the books, if helmed by someone like Brust who has a modicum of writing talent and supervised by Wheedon/other Firefly writers, could really be good.



You are aware that Brust has already written a Serenity book? We're just waiting on Pocket Books to pick an author, but man I am rooting for Brust.

Here's the thread on the BC forum: http://browncoats.serenitymovie.com/serenity/index.html?fuseaction=forum.viewtopic&t=23710

Brust is posting under "Barquiel".
 
Wheldon felt they gave it decent marketing. I saw just as many ads for it as I did for any other movie that came out at the same time. EW did several stories on the series and the movie. Face it, not enough people liked either. Sci-fi movies and books have a hard enough time crossing over to mainstream audiences. Additionally, I knew plenty of sci-fi fans that just plain didn't like Firefly or Serenity.
 
Re: EW Article

From Whedonesque;

All right, now I have to jump in and set the record straight. EW is a fine rag, but they do take things out of context. Obviously when I said I had 'closure', what I meant was "I hate Serenity, I hated Firefly, I think my fans are stupid and Nathan Fillion smells like turnips." But EW's always got to put some weird negative spin on it. But so we're clear once and for all: If you read a quote saying "I'd love to do more in this 'verse with these actors in any medium" all I'm saying is that Nathan has a turnipy odor. It's not his fault, he doesn't eat a lot of them but everyone else in the cast noticed it and tht's not really something I'm prepared to deal with any more. And Jewel said outright she wouldn't do scenes with him except stuff like the SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER funeral scene which was outside in a high SPOILER wind. So if I do manage to find another incarnation for my beloved creation, it will have been totally against my will.

I hope that clears everything up. Oh, and when I say I want to do a Spike movie, it means I have a bunion on my toe.

-joss (by which I mean Tim)

(no, actually me.)

joss | December 21, 02:12 CET
 
You guys find the Easter Egg on the DVD yet?



Highlight Play (Main Menu) and press left on your menu button. A little arrow on the right side of the screen should light up. Hit Enter.



Now if I can only get that song outta my head...
 
The SciFi Channel is running a Firefly marathon tomorrow (Sept 18), from about 8am to about 7pm, depending on your time zone. Eleven of the fourteen episodes, hopefully in the correct order.
 
Anyone catch Muse's video "Knights of Cydonia" it's on On Demand?OnDemand>MusicChoice>Aletrnative... looks very much like a hong kong spaghetti western with ray guns and robots with nods to Firefly... oh and it has laser guns.
 
I'd noticed that Serenity is one of the first HD-DVD titles out there, and the "hangar crash" sequence is being used to demo the plasma screen and surround system at Best Buy.
 
Just watched that movie again tonight
I still love it
It still cracks me up that the reavers have these incredible spaceship launchers for---spears

I may watch it again tomorrow
The Operative was a great adversary

"I don't murder children!"

"I do"
 
Ahem...


http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,72263-0.html?tw=rss.index

Firefly Reborn as Online Universe

By Mark Wallace| Also by this reporter
14:00 PM Dec, 07, 2006

Like Capt. Mal Reynolds stumbling in after a bar fight, the short-lived but much beloved sci-fi series Firefly will soon make an unexpected return, not as a TV show, but as a massively multiplayer online game.

Now that's shiny.

Multiverse, maker of a free MMO-creation platform, plans to announce Friday morning that it's struck a deal with Fox Licensing to turn the show into an MMORPG in the fashion of Star Wars Galaxies or Eve Online.

The "Browncoats," as Firefly's most devoted fans are known, have been campaigning to bring the show back almost since the moment it was canceled in late 2002. Now they'll get their wish, albeit in a new form.

"We see virtual worlds as an extraordinarily promising new entertainment medium," said Adam Kline, Fox Licensing's vice president of media enterprises in an e-mail. "We believe Multiverse can deliver an experience that will remain true to the original series, while enabling a whole new level of personal involvement for fans."

Canceled in the United States after only 11 episodes, Firefly has become the Star Trek of 21st-century sci-fi fandom: a show that seemed to remake the genre even as it stayed faithful to the conventions of "hard" science fiction, like engine room problems and menacing hordes lurking on the edge of known space.

What made the show special was the wry, often self-deprecating humor of its characters, from the captain with the checkered past to the unwittingly sexy engineer, the dull hunk of a mercenary with a girl's name, and the mysterious young woman passenger with special gifts.

The online version will move away from those central characters -- after all, there's only one Mal Reynolds. In an MMORPG, "everybody has to have their own story," says Multiverse co-founder and executive producer Corey Bridges.

"Television series can be really good properties to turn into MMOs, because when you make a TV series, not only do you need great characters, but you need to create a full, rich, compelling place," Bridges says. "If you're doing science fiction, you have to really think it out and create an incredibly rich environment that is compelling in its own right, and worth exploring and going back to week after week. That's what Joss Whedon did with Firefly."

The universe of Firefly and its spinoff film, Serenity, featured everything from Old West-style towns to futuristic urban environments, gritty spaceships and pastoral retreats -- freedom fighters, oppressive government agents, smugglers, outlaws, mercenaries, trader, townsfolk, futuristic geishas and a race of corrupted humans known as the Reavers.

Bringing those environments and character types to life as an online game will be a challenge: Multiverse is not a game developer, but rather a platform provider whose product is still in beta. Instead of making the game itself, the company will hire a development team that will craft the virtual galaxy using Multiverse tools.

"We want to find someone who wants to do something unique and fun and interesting, not just a re-skin of World of Warcraft or Star Wars Galaxies," Bridges says.

Because the underlying technology is already in place, "I feel confident that we'll see something the public can play sometime in 2008," he adds.

Founded by several early Netscape employees, Multiverse hopes to do for virtual worlds what Netscape did for web pages: provide a universal browser that lets users access any world built on the Multiverse platform using the same client software.

Already, some 7,000 development teams have registered for the Multiverse beta, according to Bridges, and more than 150 are making MMOs and non-game virtual worlds on a full-time basis. The tools are provided for free, with Multiverse taking a cut of revenue only if developers charge for their games, or for virtual items available within their worlds.

Landing Firefly on the Multiverse platform would seem to be a sure-fire promotional move. But satisfying the show's committed fans will not be easy. Online communities like FireflyFans.net, the show's premier fan site, have generated an endless stream of fan fiction, art, blogs, pod casts, meet-ups and even a fan-produced documentary, Done the Impossible, which briefly broke into the top 1,000 in DVD sales on Amazon.com.

The announcement comes just in time for this weekend's second annual gathering of Firefly fans at the Hilton hotel in Burbank, California. The "Flanvention" has already sold out, with 500 prepaid attendees signed up.

Bridges shrugs off the pressure; he just wants to make "something worthy of the show," he says. "This all springs from the genius that is Joss Whedon. It's rewarding beyond words to be able to hopefully be a footnote in the history of Firefly."
 
Gun of Serenity

I saw the question asked months ago what was the
cannon that was mounted on Serenity in the movie?

In case anyone is still interested, I found an answer at
imdb.com Internet Movie Data Base:
"The cannon the crew mounts to Serenity is a WW2 German 20mm Flak 38."
 
I would just like to add, that the sheer page count and repeated thread necromancy of this one Firely post is proof positive:

You can't stop the signal.
 
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