Does nauseous count?




---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------

 Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Glen Larson's 'Battlestar' Film Has A Spark

 Date : Fri, 27 Feb 2009 04:49:51 -0800 (PST)

 From : Bosco Bosco <[email protected]>

 To : [email protected]


Um, NO.

--- On Fri, 2/27/09, Tracey de Morsella  wrote:

From: Tracey de Morsella 
Subject: [scifinoir2] Glen Larson's 'Battlestar' Film Has A Spark
To: [email protected], "Aradia (Rae) Corenti" , "'Paul de Morsella'" , 
"Chris de Morsella" , [email protected]
Date: Friday, February 27, 2009, 2:36 AM











 
 







I’mn ot feeling this guys.  How about you? 

   

Glen Larson's 'Battlestar' Film Has A Spark 

News outlet claims continuation film heading to the big screen 

By MICHAEL HINMAN 

Feb-21-2009 

Source: IGN 

   

SciFi Channel's reboot of "Battlestar Galactica"
hasn't yet had its swan song, but the creator of the original 1978 series is
trying to steal some of its thunder as reports begin to circulate that there's
real interest in a "Battlestar" movie being made on his terms.



IGN says that Universal Pictures has teamed up with Glen A. Larson to create
his long-awaited movie on the "Battlestar" franchise which would pick
up from his original series and ignore anything that has taken place on the
SciFi Channel since 2003. Universal Pictures is owned by NBC Universal, as is
the SciFi Channel.



It's a rumor that has circulated in the past, and just as it did in the past,
there are no confirmations from anyone at all that such a film is in the works.
Even Universal has denied plans to make a "Battlestar" movie, but IGN
claims its story is solid.



How the film would be done is unclear. The original concept of a new
"Battlestar" series back in the early 2000s for Fox would have been a
continuation of the original series, and likely involved some of the former
cast, including Richard Hatch and Dirk Benedict. Hatch, who played Apollo in
the original series, spent years trying to convince studios to look at
"Battlestar" again, and even spent his own money in the 1990s to
create a trailer for what would be a continuation of the story. Some have
credited Hatch for keeping interest in a revival alive that led to the SciFi
Channel takeover of the series once Fox passed.



Hatch, of course, was against the idea of a reboot, but after the pilot aired,
softened his stance, and ended up taking on a recurring role as the terrorist
politician Tom Zarek, which won him critical acclaim.



While there are significant differences between the original
"Battlestar" and the SciFi Channel version, the basic premise is
still intact. A robot race called the Cylons attack the Twelve Colonies,
forcing a band of survivors to escape the planets and be on the run from the
robots, while trying to find a planet that existed only in legend: Earth.



Both shows also found their own version of Earth. The current series did it last
season when they found Earth as a nuclear wasteland, and the actual home of the
Cylons. The original show found Earth in 1980 and was the basis of the
short-lived series "Galactica 1980."



No sources for SyFy Portal seem to have any inkling of this project being in
development outside of IGN's report and the subsequent news reports following
it, but that doesn't mean it's not true. In the meantime, however, this story
should be treated as any rumor would. 

   







 

 

 
 
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

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