Remake or reboot or reimagination or retcon?
source: empireonline.com
Franchises can be funny things. It's not enough now to just have sequels or remakes. There's reboots, re-imaginings, spin-offs… and that's not even half of it. In 2012 alone we have a threequel to a reboot (The Dark Knight Rises), the first instalment of a prequel to the three installments of a re-adaptation (The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey), a crossover that is also a spin-off that is also a sequel (The Avengers), and the threequel to the spin-off-that-is-also-the-prequel to the sequel of the re-imagining (The Scorpion King 3: Battle For Redemption). Confused? So were we… until we sorted everything out with this handy lexicon.
Original A rarity: a script not actually directly based on anything else. See: Inception (2010), Donnie Darko (2001), Vera Drake (2004) |
Sequel A follow-up to a movie which either expands the story or simply returns to characters. See: Rocky II (1979), Highlander II: The Quickening (1991), The Color Of Money (1986) |
Threequel A follow-up to the above. Very rarely good. Followed by the fourquel, fivequel, sixquel, sevenquel, eightquel and nomorepleasequel. See: Superman III (1983), Lemon Popsicle III, aka Hot Bubblegum (1981), The Land Before Time III: The Time Of The Great Giving (1995) |
Prequel A follow-up that actually happened before the first movie in the franchise. See: Hannibal Rising (2007), X-Men: First Class (2011), Butch And Sundance: The Early Days (1979), Prometheus (2012) |
Midquel A follow-up that actually happens during a previous movie in the franchise, usually filling a chronology gap. See: Bambi II (2006), Saw IV (2007) |
Sidequel (or Parallaquel) A follow-up that happens during the previous movie, presenting many of the same events, but with different characters who have different perspectives. See: Letters From Iwo Jima (2006) |
Interquel The follow-up that actually happens between two previous movies in the franchise. See: Fast & Furious (2001) and Fast Five (2011) — which both must take place before The Fast And The Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) |
Pseudosequel A purported sequel which in reality has only a spurious (if any) connection to the previous movie(s). See: Halloween III: Season Of The Witch (1982), For A Few Dollars More (1965), Titanic II (2010) |
Remake New version of a movie which retains the key plot elements, structure and characters. Sometimes shot-for-shot. See: King Kong (2005), Psycho (1997), Insomnia (2002) |
Re-imagining New version of a movie which significantly changes plot elements, structure and characters, typically relocating the core concept to a new environment. See: King Kong (1976), Planet Of The Apes (2001), High Society (1956) |
Reboot A franchise picture which ignores all that's gone before it, resets the chronology and reinvents characters. See: Batman Begins (2005), Casino Royale (2006), The Amazing Spider-Man (2012), Man Of Steel (2013) |
Retcon A franchise picture which conveniently ignores one or more previous movies in a franchise, but not those that precede those. See: Superman Returns (2006), Highlander III: The Sorceror (1994) |
Adaptation A movie drawn a non-movie source: novel, play, TV show, comic-book, videogame, boardgame, action-figure, haiku, t-shirt, tweet... See: The Godfather (1972), GI Joe: The Rise Of Cobra (2009), Battleship (2012) |
Re-adaptation A movie that at first glance is a remake, but is in fact a new adaptation of the same source material. Some reboots are arguably also re-adaptations. See: True Grit (2010), Ben-Hur (1959), Red Dragon (2002) |
Reinterpretation A very loose adaptation that changes the setting to such a degree that it is, on the surface, barely recognisable as its source. See: Clueless (1995), 10 Things I Hate About You (1999), Freeway (1996) |
Spin-off A movie that picks up on a particular character and takes it off in its own direction, or simply locates new characters in the same universe. See: US Marshals (1998), Caravan Of Courage: An Ewok Adventure (1984), Puss In Boots (2011), The Bourne Legacy (2012). |
Cross-over A film which throws together characters from previously separate franchises or movies or universes, often just to hit each other. |
Installment Often mistaken for sequels, these are further parts in a single saga that stretches across movies. |