Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
Admittedly complicated, but Potter ain't. It’s already fading, really, see the disaster of the Fantastic Beast movies crashing and burning.When you find an objective way to measure "best" you let me know.
Admittedly complicated, but Potter ain't. It’s already fading, really, see the disaster of the Fantastic Beast movies crashing and burning.When you find an objective way to measure "best" you let me know.
Its impact has been monumental already, and it remains to be seen what happens in the long run. All those kids who grew up on it are starting to have kids of their own. It’s too big to vanish; the question is whether it fades or resurges.Admittedly complicated, but Potter ain't. It’s already fading, really, see the disaster of the Fantastic Beast movies crashing and burning.
Sure, it has been popular. But popularity comes and goes. That's why I used the example of the Oz franchise: those books were tremendously hot a hundred years ago. It still has cultural impact, but it has dimmed considerably. In 2123, Harry Potter may still be remembered, same as Oz.Its impact has been monumental already, and it remains to be seen what happens in the long run. All those kids who grew up on it are starting to have kids of their own. It’s too big to vanish; the question is whether it fades or resurges.
If a few bad movies could kill a franchise, Star Trek and Star Wars would be long gone. Potter is more like the latter, except even more so in its immediate cultural impact that went way beyond nerdom. I can’t tell you how many students I’ve had for whom the Potter books are the only novels they’ve willingly read.
I'd say nearly 50 years is a pretty good run for any franchise. In 1987, could you imagine kids in 2023 would still be into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles? But in the words of Ted Theodore Logan, "All we are is dust in the wind, dude." There's going to come a point where Harry Potter, Middle Earth, Star Wars, etc., etc. are mostly forgotten save by a few afficionados, art historians, and artists. Well, probably. Who knows? Maybe some of them will have legs like Frankenstein or Dracula. But you're right, I wouldn't bet on the longterm viability of any of them. Depending on what we're considering longterm. A century? Two centuries?I wouldn't bet on the longterm viability of Star Wars to be honest: I was obsessed with it as a kid, but my kids think Star Wars is boring, and the stats Iveseen bear that generation gap out. It's kind of a Gen X/Millennial thing.
In 1987, I was a toddler, so...no? LolI'd say nearly 50 years is a pretty good run for any franchise. In 1987, could you imagine kids in 2023 would still be into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles? But in the words of Ted Theodore Logan, "All we are is dust in the wind, dude." There's going to come a point where Harry Potter, Middle Earth, Star Wars, etc., etc. are mostly forgotten save by a few afficionados, art historians, and artists. Well, probably. Who knows? Maybe some of them will have legs like Frankenstein or Dracula. But you're right, I wouldn't bet on the longterm viability of any of them. Depending on what we're considering longterm. A century? Two centuries?
No, but I've had it pointed out to me kids have liked animal stories for a while.I'd say nearly 50 years is a pretty good run for any franchise. In 1987, could you imagine kids in 2023 would still be into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?
Ouch!In 1987, I was a toddler, so...no? Lol
Yeah, I'd have to agree that he's a pretty good contender. I think last year for some reason I thought of the Chronicles of Amber and it occurred to me that I haven't heard anyone talk about Roger Zelazny and that made me sad. "Dust in the wind" indeed.Tolkien's work will go the long haul. It had already been popular for decades even after Tolkien's death when the median American was born (~1983). Most authors work gets forgotten shortly after they die.
Here's an actual photo of me as my father read Animal Farm to me.No, but I've had it pointed out to me kids have liked animal stories for a while.
It is interesting to think back on what was big when I started reading sci-fi/fantasy seriously (early 90's) to now: a lot has fallen off, but quite a bit has staying power. Earthsea, Narnia, Middle Earth, and Prydain all still get a lot of love and attention.Ouch!
Yeah, I'd have to agree that he's a pretty good contender. I think last year for some reason I thought of the Chronicles of Amber and it occurred to me that I haven't heard anyone talk about Roger Zelazny and that made me sad. "Dust in the wind" indeed.
Here's an actual photo of me as my father read Animal Farm to me.
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I feel kind of lucky because I have a friend who mentions Amber like almost ever time I see him (if we hang out more than an hour or two). It's a pity so many 1970s fantasy series, however massively influential they were at the time, seem to be being forgotten by the march of time. That said 1980s fantasy is, if anything, even more forgotten, albeit perhaps more of it justifiably (though some even less - c.f. Glen Wolfe's stuff).I think last year for some reason I thought of the Chronicles of Amber and it occurred to me that I haven't heard anyone talk about Roger Zelazny and that made me sad. "Dust in the wind" indeed.
I think the only reason they are is the very dedicated efforts of the various licence-holders, and the fact that fans of the 1990s cartoon are now of the age where they're in charge of the media and can indulge their nostalgia.In 1987, could you imagine kids in 2023 would still be into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?
I mean the big issue is going to be copyright. Frankenstein might well not have "had legs" if copyright extended as long as it does now in the early and middle 20th century, and whilst Dracula itself didn't leave copyright until 1962, the original legends were there to lean on, just without the Stoker specifics.Maybe some of them will have legs like Frankenstein or Dracula. But you're right, I wouldn't bet on the longterm viability of any of them.