Poll
Question:
What should Wes Craven's estate do with the series?
Option 1: Make another film in the original continuity starring Robert Englund!
votes: 11
Option 2: Reboot the series again with new actors and a new continuity!
votes: 4
Option 3: Some form of "vs." sequel with another horror icon!
votes: 0
Option 4: Leave it alone; the series has run its course!
votes: 7
With the film rights of A Nightmare on Elm Street reverting to the late Wes Craven's estate, what should they do with those rights? Several pitches have supposedly been made to the estate, but nothing concrete has been announced. As a fan of the series, how should they proceed?
I would like a vague "sequel" with Englund returning in the role. I really like Mike Flanagan as director and after seeing Doctor Sleep, I am curious to see what he could achieve.
I really want one last hoorah with Englund, and also preferrably Langenkamp in The Beautiful Dream. they're gonna reboot it anyway, why not indulge in what the fans clearly want?
Englund is 70+ years old, so what? So is Alice Cooper..
Look at part 1. freddy's lurking in the shadows. the few big stunts are stuntmen.. With an approach like that, where's the harm in Englund reprising his role one last time?
Quote from: Rod Lane on May 25, 2020, 01:30:23 PM
I really want one last hoorah with Englund, and also preferrably Langenkamp in The Beautiful Dream. they're gonna reboot it anyway, why not indulge in what the fans clearly want?
Englund is 70+ years old, so what? So is Alice Cooper..
Look at part 1. freddy's lurking in the shadows. the few big stunts are stuntmen.. With an approach like that, where's the harm in Englund reprising his role one last time?
We all know Englund, if asked he would do it without a second thought. It's not up to him, it's up to the studio and producers.
The wonderful thing about Wes' Wonderful World of Krueger is that the possibilities are endless.
But each have their own hurdles....
Continue the continuity of the original movies?There's a lot of baggage to carry. What's left to tell? Freddy set out what he originally intended to do and murdered every last Elm Street child. He killed them all, even Nancy(Boooo...Hisssss). Those Parents who burned him,STILL lost every thing.And he just keeps on killing.He won.
If Robert Englund were to be brought back,the movie has gotta be big in scope.Because,lets be real, this will be the last one with him. This movie has to be epic .With the return of Alice and Jacob.With the return of Nancy as a spiritual Dream Master. With Nancy and Alice facing off against Krueger together in one big Final Woman fight.With all the amazing CGI and practical effects that could never be done before possible.
When last we left him he had slaughtered the whole of Springwoods children before getting blown up by his own daughter. And while I enjoy Freddy's Dead to a certain degree.....I'm not nor ever will be a fan of the giant burnt wiggly sperm known as the Dream Demons who gave him the power of voodoo...who doo? You doo? do what?Remind me of the babe ....I digress...
Where does he go from there?I really don't want a movie where he tries to use or kill his father's brother's nephew's cousin's former roommate or some other long lost never mentioned before relative. I'd like to see a Nightmare in the original continuity to show that Freddy is now a danger to the whole of the world.Everyone is aware and afraid of Freddy.Fear generated on a global scale. He is killing worldwide. Go beyond the need to rehash and explain who Freddy was and "is he or is he not real?" in yet another movie?Anyone watching this film already knows Freddy,or knows someone who will fill in the blanks.Get on with it!Tell us something new
Like Santa Claus,in a new movie everyone should know Freddy.Children are taught in school how to control their dreams.Drafted and enlisted into a army of Warriors trained to fight Freddy inside the Nightmare.Parents will go to great lengths to help their children survive the night.Helicopter dream patrolling.Hypnocil addicts.Killer tweets.
Another reboot? Again we have the issue with the original story-line being played out.Parents burn a serial killer to protect their children, and that same serial killer returns years later to kill those children anyway in their dreams where the parents cant protect them. We've seen that.I feel there is nothing they could introduce to the table that would make a second remake interesting to watch if they tried to tell the original story with new actors. Unless they change the history of Freddy or the reason why he was burnt.That that reason is an even darker secret than the murder of Freddy.But twisting that history could turn a lot of core audience off.Some folks have a strange idea of entertainment , and they definitely don't want anyone to change a note of the original song.
Another VS? Well, they could easily CGI the corpses of Abbott and Costello ...
I wish the Craven family would start out with a television show.Rebuild the brand over the length of a series story-line vs cramming all the info,old and new, into a single movie.Allow us to meet new characters,spend time with them ,and then let Freddy kill them off randomly to our dismay
We could meet the new Freddy in the series if Robert doesn't or can't return.Let this Freddy be his own vs having to fill the glove of old.We dont know why this version of Freddy is after the children.But that secret will be revealed over time.
Or maybe the series is all about the handing off the glove to a new monster.A young man who is following in the footsteps of Freddy.And Freddy enjoys being the mentor to a new monster.Maybe Freddy cant invade dreams,or cause any real physical soul collecting harm anymore now that the Demons have left him, but he can certainly coach the next in line.
If it works, the second or third season could lead into a movie.
Or,a possibility, what if the entirety of the first season is a dream of one of the characters.Season one sees death after death and ends with the main character waking from a coma in a hospital.And all the friends and people killed off in season one , are once again alive in season two.So the characters we liked from the first season return , only to be in danger of being killed again.This time for real.
Maybe Freddy was trapped in the dream of the coma patient who never woke.True, he induced Joey into a coma but that was a trap he set that he knew he could get out of because Kristin would eventually pull a number of people into the shared dream that Freddy could then slip out of inside.This dreamer was all alone with Freddy for years.
And what if the original dreamer was the last child that Freddy intended to murder back before he was burnt alive.But for some reason ,Freddy never came back for her/him. But that never stopped their mind from thinking about what could have happened,the almost death. Obsessing over the details of Freddy's past.So much living in fear,and dreaming in fear that it eventually calls Freddy from the shadows. The "dream" version of Freddy opens a gateway that allows Freddy to cross over and step into the shoes of the dream version,making the death and pain real.
I want to see at least one more movie with Robert playing Freddy. But I want to see a dark, creepy and serious Freddy like the 1984 original, and not a "comedian" Freddy as in the later movies. I'm not really a fan of any more "versus", even though I didn't mind Freddy vs Jason. I want them to go back to the original concept.
Quote from: HazelRah on May 27, 2020, 05:11:24 PM
If Robert Englund were to be brought back,the movie has gotta be big in scope.Because,lets be real, this will be the last one with him. This movie has to be epic .With the return of Alice and Jacob.With the return of Nancy as a spiritual Dream Master. With Nancy and Alice facing off against Krueger together in one big Final Woman fight.With all the amazing CGI and practical effects that could never be done before possible.
Like Santa Claus,in a new movie everyone should know Freddy.Children are taught in school how to control their dreams.Drafted and enlisted into a army of Warriors trained to fight Freddy inside the Nightmare.Parents will go to great lengths to help their children survive the night.Helicopter dream patrolling.Hypnocil addicts.Killer tweets.
Yup. Something like this
Quote from: HazelRah on May 27, 2020, 05:11:24 PMIf Robert Englund were to be brought back,the movie has gotta be big in scope.Because,lets be real, this will be the last one with him. This movie has to be epic .With the return of Alice and Jacob.With the return of Nancy as a spiritual Dream Master. With Nancy and Alice facing off against Krueger together in one big Final Woman fight.With all the amazing CGI and practical effects that could never be done before possible.
Yes, I agree. If it is the last one with Robert, it has to be just as good as the original, if not better. Yes, the original is a classic and will always be the best in most people's eyes, but they have to go out with a bang if this is to be the last one with Englund.
Yes. Another retelling (rehash) of the mystery of who Freddy is and why he's after the kids is a waste of time and space at this point. Also, in this day and age the kids would be able to find out who he was and whatnot by a simple google search.. (yet another plothole in the remake btw..) Move on from that. Keep it in the original timeline, with the original story about The Springwood Slasher.
Freddy being a threat on a world wide scale threatening an apocalypse? Sure, no argument from me. Nancy in the beautiful dream? No problem. Alice and Jacob? Great. Let's go. Original actors reprising their roles goes without saying. And bring back Bernstein to do the score. Happy ending or end of the world? Doesn't really matter to me :P But yes, it has to be big!
I think if one more Nightmare movie is to be big, you need to have people getting involved who are familiar with the series.
I've often wondered what ideas Wes Craven had written down in regard to the future of Freddy .
His original intended ending for the first film was going to be much less a concrete confirmation that Krueger was still out there.The in your face ,Marge through the front door , was more of Bob Shaye wanting to give the audience one last jolt that would leave them talking about the film all the way out the theater doors.
And at the time Wes probably wasn't thinking about a sequel possibility.The script was started in 81 and by the time filming began in June of 84, sequels to horror were still not a given( the Universal Monsters most likely being the first time there was a run of movies with the same monsters).Sure Friday the 13th had its 4th released in 84, and Halloween was up to Part 3( the third minus the main maniac,even) . Not to mention, Craven had to give away all his rights to the original just to get it made. So there was not much in it for him to spend time thinking about new Freddy adventures.
Then, the series quickly became a sequel moneymaker for New Line.
Was Wes even asked to write his own sequel to Part 2? I know they offered him the directors job , but Wes said no after reading the script they eventually used. But did they even ask him if he had any ideas?
Then he returned to write the script for Part 3, but due to filming Deadly Friend couldnt direct. And then with the continued success and merchandising of the gloved one, relation with the studio soured. Wes ,rightfully thinking he should be owed money for giving them this cash cow in the first place.
So it's unlikely he spent a lot of time coming up with new ideas.And focused his energies on whatever movie he WAS getting paid to make.
But as we all know, it's hard NOT to think about the movie, the characters, and the possibilities. So I wonder if every once and a while Wes jotted down an idea that fit into the makeup of the Nightmare. Some of this must have happened already by the time he made up with New Line(check cleared,$cha-ching$) because he was able to produce what became the fantastic New Nightmare. Those ideas and themes of that movie must have been percolating in his brain for years.
There might even have been elements that he cut from the writing of the original script that could be of interest,as they may have only been removed due to obvious budgetary and special effect capabilities of the time, or merely that they didnt fit into the movie as a whole.
I wonder if Wes had a notebook of ideas sitting in his workspace or library of unused Nightmare ideas. The Craven family might want to start with those and share them with whomever they hire to write the next movie. Though, I imagine the net potential movie will come from a submitted script versus a for hire.
It'd be good if they could cover Freddy's life and death all in 1 movie. Obviously they could cover everything, from his trial to when the courts let him go on a technicality, to the parents burning him alive, and when he becomes a dream killer. You'd probably need like a 3 hour movie for all that, but I think they can do it.
Freddy's Life and death..
That's not a bad idea. Sure there are certain fan fics that does that, some even good. But it would obviously be nice to get something official. And yes, it would have to be a three-parter or at the very least two parts.
You need to start with Freddy's killing spree, no more beating around the bush. The Springwood Slasher needs to be adressed and shown.
So the first part needs to be american suburbia, white picket fences, children disappearing and turning up dead. Don't focus too much on Fred or make him the lead, focus on officer Thompson who's assigned to the case. And show a community falling apart at the seams.
Loner Freddy or family man Freddy? THAT is the question.. Personally I prefer loner Freddy, but I do recognize that most people are familiar with family man Freddy. so.. Whatever works for the story, I guess.
And this first part would focus on that, leading up to his subsequent arrest and mistrial.
And of course the lynching.
For the second part? Well, Freddy spent 10 years getting ready for returning to extract his revenge.
I'd say give us raw emotional human drama depicting the aftermath of this. What exactly happened between Donald and Marge? All we know is that they divorced. I'm also suspecting Donald got promoted to lieutenant for apprehending Freddy, even though the search warrant was botched.
But what happened to the other families? For instance the Parkers? Elaine seemed to have gotten the house and is shown living pretty well. Seargent Parker could certainly have been her husband and also Kristen's dad.
These are just loose ideas, but there's certainly enough drama to be found here..
Part 3. Well, this is essentially Freddy's return and basically Nightmare part 1. I'm NOT interested in revisiting the dream demons, but we need to visit the nightmare realm in here one way or another..
While I would be interested in a birth to burning tale . I think that day has passed. At the height of Freddydom they could have had a successful go of it. "For the first time....see how the Nightmare began!"
But how could a movie "bio" be interesting enough to appeal beyond the Elm Street base? We are talking about a icon of fear ,here, it has to be dark, and nasty.Not some simple serial killer story.
And which version of Freddy's history would they follow? The Original Craven movie, or the Dream Warriors conception horror? The Kruegers a daddy of Freddys Dead timeline? Dream Demons? Freddys Nightmare's "No More Mr Nice Guy"?
Admittedly, I am not a fan of the Freddy history played out in Freddy's Dead. It never set right with my picture of what Krueger was before the first movie.While it was fun to watch in the context of the last movie, it felt out of character.
There is a LOT of ground to cover in a Freddy origin story. The corruption of his soul that drove him to murder....the murders themselves..the towns fear of the unknown.. .the investigation....the trial...The vigilante burning
With so much information to convey, the story would be better served as a multi episode series.No need to rush through or past the checkpoints.Allow for multiple perspectives on the history.Give breathing room to building the fear of Freddy.
Maybe they could do a story with someone researching the history of Freddy. Coming to Springwood to explore its past.This person seeks out "the child who lived" ,the last intended victim of Kruegers before he was captured and subsequently burned alive. Someone whom Freddy was scared away from killing on his last night of freedom. This child has lived in fear of that night for their entire life.And in survivors guilt. Haunted their entire life.With bullies picking on the kid on the playground "one...two....Freddys coming for you..." to adults whispering about the child wherever they went.This person observed the mysterious deaths of the many children of Elm Street/Springwood over the years.The names of families that he knew personally.Some were even friends he lost as a child to Freddys touch.The constant ,violent nature of these deaths.Maybe as the child grew up, they looked into the history of Freddy themselves.And when the reporter comes to town, the stories and flashbacks come out.....and what if new murders started to happen in town.With a Freddy flare. Is it a new copycat?...the Next Freddy?...or is all this talk of Krueger with the townsfolk,the families who lost children, and the survivor...stirring the embers of the fear that fires Freddy,calling him back home to Elm Street?
Alice and Jacob live their lives in modern day 2025. Krueger has been 'he who shall not be named' since 1989. For Jacob's entire life, he's taken pills to keep him healthy. He thinks they're vitamins, heart arrhythmia pills or something, but they're a new form of Hypnocil. Only he and his mother are prescribed them, only Alice and the pharmacist know why.
Jacob (36) is a young father now of two kids named Rick (15) and Kristen (16), with a wife named Sarah, his high school sweetheart. Through some unfortunate circumstance, Jacob, forgets to pick up his prescription, runs out of pills and misses a day. Nothing seems to go awry, despite his anxieties. Until that night. He has his first Freddy dream. Krueger is older, grittier. Without the souls of the Elm Street teens, Freddy has aged, and is near spiritual death. This reveals his status as a dream demon being a curse he wished for in purgatory that was granted, so long as he continued to kill his victims. And now, 32 years later, He's in his seventies and waning miserably in solitude.
Jacob wakes up, never knowing who the man was or why he instinctively ran from him. Later, he tells Sarah about his dream. They collectively shrug it off, Sarah casually mentioning a dream monster her dad told her about when she was young.
The next night, he has the dream again, this time with Krueger getting a rare early-upper hand. Just before he gets killed, Jacob wakes. There's a POV shot of someone coming from the basement, through the living room, up the stairs, down the hall and into the master bedroom. Only Sarah lies there. A claw bursts into the shot and brutally slashes Sarah, leaving her to bleed out on the bed. Ala Elm Street 2, it cuts to Jacob, holding a claw, and screaming.
After being arrested on charges of murdering his wife, his mother visits him in a maximum security prison. Alice says she knows what caused this and apologizes to Jacob. She tells him his father didn't just die in a car accident and his grandfather didn't merely die in his sleep. She then proceeds to tell the tale of Fred Krueger, naming her and Jacob as the final links to the original parents on Elm Street who tracked Krueger down. Alice reveals the way to finally kill Freddy: "he dies when we die. We take him to our graves." Similar to Freddy vs Jason, he lives by being spoken of, thriving on the fear he elicits. Only Jacob and Alice know he exists anymore, after all records and accounts of Krueger have been wiped away. So at this point, Freddy existing is a Mandela Effect to the rest of the world who think of a Dreamscape copycat killer. Only Alice and Jacob know of a real serial killer from the late 70's-mid 80's. Alice leaves a fresh prescription of Hypnocil for her son before leaving.
That night at home, Alice begins to feel tired. Her bottle of pills magically rolls out of the medicine cabinet, onto the floor, and behind the sink. When she looks for her pills, they're gone. She panics, knowing she cannot sleep. Frightened, she hurries to her son's home to make sure his children are okay. On the way, she visualizes the pharmacist's death at the hands of Krueger. She narrowly escapes death as her car rolls off the road.
In jail, a disgusted guard refuses to allow Jacob his meds for the night. Jacob falls asleep terrified.
Kristen is asleep when Alice arrives. Their aunt Yvonne is watching them and worried about Alice coming around during this time. She's in on keeping Krueger mum as well.
Jacob, possessing all of his mother's dream powers, enter's Kristen's dream. Alice is there, protecting her. Krueger arrives, now terrorizing Jacob's daughter, Alice's granddaughter. The nightmare ends with all three waking up in a panic, but alive. Alice and Kristen go to check on Rick and find Yvonne dead with those 4 familiar claw-marks, and Rick soundly asleep.
From this point the rest of the film is about Jacob bringing on all new killings from his prison cell, with Freddy infecting the dreams of his daughter through him. Kristen's teenage friends die through their dreams when she tells 3 of them about a nightmare disregarding what Alice told her. Freddy gets more and more powerful, with dreams becoming further and further indecipherable from reality (new CGI). Alice stops taking Hypnocil in an attempt to protect her grandchildren in their dreams as CPS tries to take them away from her custody. While Alice forces Hypnocil on the children, the pills are ineffective with Jacob's dreams being Freddy's entry point. Freddy always spares his life and Jacob never speaks of the terrors he sees in dreams to ensure it doesn't spread.
Authorities eventually place Alice visiting her son in prison, as well as on the scene of the crime in Yvonne's murder. A manhunt begins in search of Alice for connections to the grisly deaths. Kristen and Rick are left to fend for themselves.
Jacob eventually escapes from prison by weaponizing Freddy on a guard. He makes his way to Springwood, dramatically reuniting with what's left of his family. By the time he gets home, the manhunt has extended for him and his mom. Jacob, Alice, Rick and Kristen all end up together, barricaded in Alice's home. The police, news, and angry parents are all outside attempting to bring the two 'murderers' to justice before they kill their own grandchildren.
In a final dream battle, Jacob is killed when Freddy no longer needs him. Alice is soon follow. Kristen sees Freddy going for her younger brother and distracts him by pretending to accept his offer to "kill for him". She claws Freddy to death before clawing herself. Rick sees his sister claw herself, doesn't know what to make of this, and forces himself to wake up. He has a dream power. He awakens to find his grandmother and father dead on the floor. His sister is bleeding out on the floor. Before Kristen dies, she tells her brother "Don't be afraid of your dreams!" The very idea of Freddy dies with Kristen. In a way, Alice and Jacob have succeeded in taking him to their graves, but at a huge cost.
Before any evidence is discovered, a newscaster accidentally starts a fire to the home and it engulfs into flames, burning everybody inside, including Rick, while the cameras and authorities watch on.
10 years later, a new killer emerges, exacting revenge on the people of Springwood for killing him: Rick Jordan.
First time writing Elm Street fanfic, and it shows. Haha, but yes, if they continue the story, they can begin anew with an inhabitant of the original Elm Street teens taking over the role of dream demon. The twist is he had no clue about who Freddy was because no one around him wanted him to know. His ascension to demon coincides with resentment of the police and the townspeople who watched him burn to death. This effectively ends Freddy as a character, begins the series anew with a different killer, a different mythology, and so many places to go. I figure it references the original films, while also avoiding being a straight retelling and redoing of popular scenes from the 1984 original. Freddy goes out on a final high note, using practical effects in earlier dreams and state of the art CGI in the later dreams which depict him as younger, stronger and more gruesome than ever.
Final kill count would be 10, which is also the entry in the series if you count the 2010 remake.
That wasn't too shabby. 8)
Quote from: Itsadoor on June 11, 2020, 04:53:22 PM
Alice and Jacob live their lives in modern day 2025. Krueger has been 'he who shall not be named' since 1989. For Jacob's entire life, he's taken pills to keep him healthy. He thinks they're vitamins, heart arrhythmia pills or something, but they're a new form of Hypnocil. Only he and his mother are prescribed them, only Alice and the pharmacist know why.
Jacob (36) is a young father now of two kids named Rick (15) and Kristen (16), with a wife named Sarah, his high school sweetheart. Through some unfortunate circumstance, Jacob, forgets to pick up his prescription, runs out of pills and misses a day. Nothing seems to go awry, despite his anxieties. Until that night. He has his first Freddy dream. Krueger is older, grittier. Without the souls of the Elm Street teens, Freddy has aged, and is near spiritual death. This reveals his status as a dream demon being a curse he wished for in purgatory that was granted, so long as he continued to kill his victims. And now, 32 years later, He's in his seventies and waning miserably in solitude.
Jacob wakes up, never knowing who the man was or why he instinctively ran from him. Later, he tells Sarah about his dream. They collectively shrug it off, Sarah casually mentioning a dream monster her dad told her about when she was young.
The next night, he has the dream again, this time with Krueger getting a rare early-upper hand. Just before he gets killed, Jacob wakes. There's a POV shot of someone coming from the basement, through the living room, up the stairs, down the hall and into the master bedroom. Only Sarah lies there. A claw bursts into the shot and brutally slashes Sarah, leaving her to bleed out on the bed. Ala Elm Street 2, it cuts to Jacob, holding a claw, and screaming.
After being arrested on charges of murdering his wife, his mother visits him in a maximum security prison. Alice says she knows what caused this and apologizes to Jacob. She tells him his father didn't just die in a car accident and his grandfather didn't merely die in his sleep. She then proceeds to tell the tale of Fred Krueger, naming her and Jacob as the final links to the original parents on Elm Street who tracked Krueger down. Alice reveals the way to finally kill Freddy: "he dies when we die. We take him to our graves." Similar to Freddy vs Jason, he lives by being spoken of, thriving on the fear he elicits. Only Jacob and Alice know he exists anymore, after all records and accounts of Krueger have been wiped away. So at this point, Freddy existing is a Mandela Effect to the rest of the world who think of a Dreamscape copycat killer. Only Alice and Jacob know of a real serial killer from the late 70's-mid 80's. Alice leaves a fresh prescription of Hypnocil for her son before leaving.
That night at home, Alice begins to feel tired. Her bottle of pills magically rolls out of the medicine cabinet, onto the floor, and behind the sink. When she looks for her pills, they're gone. She panics, knowing she cannot sleep. Frightened, she hurries to her son's home to make sure his children are okay. On the way, she visualizes the pharmacist's death at the hands of Krueger. She narrowly escapes death as her car rolls off the road.
In jail, a disgusted guard refuses to allow Jacob his meds for the night. Jacob falls asleep terrified.
Kristen is asleep when Alice arrives. Their aunt Yvonne is watching them and worried about Alice coming around during this time. She's in on keeping Krueger mum as well.
Jacob, possessing all of his mother's dream powers, enter's Kristen's dream. Alice is there, protecting her. Krueger arrives, now terrorizing Jacob's daughter, Alice's granddaughter. The nightmare ends with all three waking up in a panic, but alive. Alice and Kristen go to check on Rick and find Yvonne dead with those 4 familiar claw-marks, and Rick soundly asleep.
From this point the rest of the film is about Jacob bringing on all new killings from his prison cell, with Freddy infecting the dreams of his daughter through him. Kristen's teenage friends die through their dreams when she tells 3 of them about a nightmare disregarding what Alice told her. Freddy gets more and more powerful, with dreams becoming further and further indecipherable from reality (new CGI). Alice stops taking Hypnocil in an attempt to protect her grandchildren in their dreams as CPS tries to take them away from her custody. While Alice forces Hypnocil on the children, the pills are ineffective with Jacob's dreams being Freddy's entry point. Freddy always spares his life and Jacob never speaks of the terrors he sees in dreams to ensure it doesn't spread.
Authorities eventually place Alice visiting her son in prison, as well as on the scene of the crime in Yvonne's murder. A manhunt begins in search of Alice for connections to the grisly deaths. Kristen and Rick are left to fend for themselves.
Jacob eventually escapes from prison by weaponizing Freddy on a guard. He makes his way to Springwood, dramatically reuniting with what's left of his family. By the time he gets home, the manhunt has extended for him and his mom. Jacob, Alice, Rick and Kristen all end up together, barricaded in Alice's home. The police, news, and angry parents are all outside attempting to bring the two 'murderers' to justice before they kill their own grandchildren.
In a final dream battle, Jacob is killed when Freddy no longer needs him. Alice is soon follow. Kristen sees Freddy going for her younger brother and distracts him by pretending to accept his offer to "kill for him". She claws Freddy to death before clawing herself. Rick sees his sister claw herself, doesn't know what to make of this, and forces himself to wake up. He has a dream power. He awakens to find his grandmother and father dead on the floor. His sister is bleeding out on the floor. Before Kristen dies, she tells her brother "Don't be afraid of your dreams!" The very idea of Freddy dies with Kristen. In a way, Alice and Jacob have succeeded in taking him to their graves, but at a huge cost.
Before any evidence is discovered, a newscaster accidentally starts a fire to the home and it engulfs into flames, burning everybody inside, including Rick, while the cameras and authorities watch on.
10 years later, a new killer emerges, exacting revenge on the people of Springwood for killing him: Rick Jordan.
First time writing Elm Street fanfic, and it shows. Haha, but yes, if they continue the story, they can begin anew with an inhabitant of the original Elm Street teens taking over the role of dream demon. The twist is he had no clue about who Freddy was because no one around him wanted him to know. His ascension to demon coincides with resentment of the police and the townspeople who watched him burn to death. This effectively ends Freddy as a character, begins the series anew with a different killer, a different mythology, and so many places to go. I figure it references the original films, while also avoiding being a straight retelling and redoing of popular scenes from the 1984 original. Freddy goes out on a final high note, using practical effects in earlier dreams and state of the art CGI in the later dreams which depict him as younger, stronger and more gruesome than ever.
Final kill count would be 10, which is also the entry in the series if you count the 2010 remake.
Not bad, I don't mind it.
Thank you, both! :D
My stance on this has changed a bit. I think if they can do one last movie with Robert, they absolutely should. There's really no reason not to attempt it.
As for going forward after that...I don't know.
I'd love for there to be one last film with Robert and Heather again, especially since both of them seem to want to do it. But if it doesn't happen, I'm fine with the series being as it is.
I voted for choice #1, but I have no particular hope we will get a Freddy flick in the next few years. In fact, it wouldn't shock me if Jason made it back to the screen first, despite being in a worse place (the courtroom) than development hell.
Have either of the Craven children even made a public statement about the future of the franchise? The idea that they have any interest in getting a film made is starting to feel like baseless assumption.
Quote from: Ricky on July 12, 2020, 07:16:52 AM
My stance on this has changed a bit. I think if they can do one last movie with Robert, they absolutely should. There's really no reason not to attempt it.
As for going forward after that...I don't know.
Agreed
Quote from: Ominous1 on July 30, 2020, 06:49:01 PMHave either of the Craven children even made a public statement about the future of the franchise? The idea that they have any interest in getting a film made is starting to feel like baseless assumption.
I haven't seen anything indicating they have plans for it, but I also haven't really actively looked for it.
i say make another one but only if Robert play Krueger if he not then leave it alone. We already had one remake without Robert and sucked so damn bad
Quote from: NancyThompson1984 on September 29, 2020, 07:17:04 PM
i say make another one but only if Robert play Krueger if he not then leave it alone. We already had one remake without Robert and sucked so damn bad
Yeah I pretty much agree. Would love to see Robert play Freddy one last time.
And on the remake, yes it did suck in most people's eyes, but I still think it's better than "Freddy's Dead", and probably "Dream Child". Just my opinion.
I, personally, would really love to see the multiverse incorporated into the Elm Street series. I always considered the Freddy from the original movie to be a separate entity from the Freddy in the sequels anyway. Maybe use the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis as the McGuffin. I could totally see Freddy chasing our protagonist(s) use the book to jump through alternate timelines, encountering different iterations of Freddy and saying howdy (and farewell) to some beloved Elm Street veterans. We could also see movies that never were.
Thought I should put this here. I hope it's true, but it looks like a fan made poster.
I had an idea for something called "Freddy Krueger: The Bastard Son Of 100 Maniacs".
It would be set in present day and would acknowledge the original continuity. Therefore it would need to be Englund.
Basically a bullied kid finds a way to resurrect Krueger and manipulate him into doing his bidding. Using black magic I'm guessing. Krueger is furious because he isn't in control of himself and wants to break free.
The kids older sister sets out to stop him and is helped by the spirit of Nancy Thompson.
that's what I got.
Quote from: NancyThompson1984 on September 29, 2020, 07:17:04 PM
i say make another one but only if Robert play Krueger if he not then leave it alone. We already had one remake without Robert and sucked so damn bad
I agree that if we can get a new one, I'd want Robert in but in fairness, the remake was awful but not because of a lack of Robert. It had a bad script, bad casting, bad effects. Even with Robert in there, it's still a bad movie.
It ain't going to happen, unfortunately. I've been hearing about this for the last 3 years. I hope I'm wrong because I'd love to see at least 1 more Nightmare movie with Robert, but I don't think it'll happen.😢
https://screenrant.com/nightmare-elm-street-robert-englund-freddy-return-too-late/?fbclid=IwAR3xZnhBfHZ3wlsGLEntIW_Cn7yjJUXOcVFIli2oabPd0l_JGsLnFXjMy30
There you go; it's not happening.
Honestly, I'd have to say I think of myself as the franchise biggest fan. I know we all say this, but truly I believe that a good portion of any new nightmare on elm street movie should come from the fans. That can range as small as the basic concept to possibly a fan written script. I know Hollywood is not into unsolicited scripts and there could cause legal issues if the contracts don't have all their P's and Q's signed right.studios won't even look at unsolicited scripts either which is a little frustrating because there have been some very good concepts on these forums that could work. Just because a person has never written a script, directed a movie, or even been to Hollywood doesn't mean there isn't a diamond in the rough. Let's face it, everyone is the movie business was once unknown and it took just one chance to create movie history. That being said, I have watched the nightmare films my whole life. I was 3 years old when the original came out and began watching the franchise when I was four. It has taken many twists and turns and never got old because each film effectively pulled skeletons out of the closet one by one with each movie while staying relevant to the time period the movie was made. You learned something new in each film and we're left with slight Easter eggs each time. I have read for the past 19 years since the last Freddy film was released that put Robert Englund as the villain article after article hoping for news of a new film. Ideas have been tossed around and scripts have been written only to be shelved. So after almost two decades of waiting, I decided that if you want something done right, do it yourself. At the beginning of this year I started writing concepts of my own. Coming up on 2023 I knew it had to be soon for another film. A franchise like this shouldn't rise from the grave on an odd year or a year of no significance. I started thinking, and tossing ideas back and forth. How can this epic franchise return without jumping the shark, pissing off fans, or leaving a dark stain of Wes Cravens legacy? So it hit me. The next film should be released on in 2023 on the twenty year anniversary. That got me going, so I did write a script that seemed fitting, until I realized how cheesy it was. Then I tossed my composition notebook and started from scratch. From scratch, the beginning, was what was missing, and a conclusion was necessary as well seeing as how at the end of Freddy vs Jason, Jason walks out with Freddy's head which winks, signifying he was not dead. However, in the reboot in 2010 with another actor playing the iconic character nightmares are made of, it did not sit well with fans. The backstory was twisted up as if Freddy was a victim and the town may have murdered an innocent man. Rule number one in remakes and reboots, don't screw with the original. That does not mean, however, that some of the elements weren't partially on point. Yes, Freddy murdered children and was let off on a technicality, this angering the parents to kill him. However, in the series first episode of Freddy's nightmares which follows the case, blunders, and murder of Freddy Krueger, the rookie cop who almost saved Freddy brought a good point. That wasn't justice in the right way even though he did deserve punishment, which catapulted Freddy to accept the dream demons offer and take revenge on the parents who killed them by killing their kids in their sleep, igniting a story that has spanned almost 4 decades and countless efforts to kill Freddy for good. The idea painted Freddy as born and bread to be a serial killer because how he was concieved and his abusive upbringing and touches on ideas from criminal profiling as to what makes a serial killer. So I wrote two scripts, a two part finale to the franchise. The first being a prequel, the second being a conclusion. The first again being on the twenty year anniversary of the last film which is in 2023, and.....wait for it, the following film to be released in 2024 on the 40 year anniversary of the first film. This would also make film 9 and 10......never sleep again. Robert Englund himself has expressed coming back as a cameo due to he's 74 and the make up sessions and stunts he feel he is too old for and he knows if he plays Freddy one more time the fans will want more. Now, that man can do anything, but he has a slight point. That is why there will have to be a conclusion to end Freddy for good. Not saying that will end the franchise, because any villain who is given a job by dream demons to kill for their souls can be fired and another villain hired, which opens up a whole new world to continue the basic principle of the franchise. So between both films, a prequel that has no makeup or stunts and a conclusion that kills Freddy for good, Robert Englund would be safe to play the role one more time which will tribute Wes craven and the man who brought Freddy to life, Robert Englund. Anyone else playing the slasher villain to the very end would be catastrophic. So through the series his backstory has been touched upon, and I've written a prequel that continues those already existing storyline but I also added to it to fill a whole film while staying true to the brand and answering some long awaited questions. It will put a slight psychological effect to the story, which starts with the very graphic rape scene of Amanda Krueger and him being given up for adoption at less than a month old. This is where the filling begins. Freddy won't have it all bad a first, which will have to questioning what made him grow up to kill kids. Not just anyone, but kids, which victims are chosen by killers for a reason and I explain throughout the prequel the reasoning to not only his choice of victim, but to his choice of weapon and how Freddy himself came up with it and how the Fedora hat came into play he is known for and some other questions. After he's adopted, his first 10 years are good, with a loving mother and hard working father, that is until an accident cripples his father, he takes to drugs and alcohol, and begins to unleash his rage on Freddy. His mother tries to protect Freddy which gets her killed. His father then forces Freddy to help him dispose of her body by cutting it up and setting it ablaze in their back yard. That was the end to Freddy's loving home, which was replaced with constant abuse and no one to save him. That builds the hate inside him because no one was there to save him and he ends up killing his father when he was just 16. Freddy finally feels powerful and in control and immediately goes for another kill outside a bar, but he gets his ass kicked because his target was a big biker guy that was far stronger than him. He then gives up, goes in the bar for a drink and encounters a strange man. Now in Greek mythology, Hypnos is the god of dreams who had 3 sons. These are the previously talked about dream demons. The most powerful being Morpheus, who takes on human male form. The is who Freddy meets, gets drunk with, and ultimately after many drinks Freddy confesses his dirty deed not caring of the outcome. Morpheus is looking for a truly evil soul, but they have to become that way on their own with free will. So he tells Freddy that first off, he needed weaker victims, children. Second, he could put the murder of his father behind him and live a happy life or he can give into his demons to become powerful. Thinking of his mom, he chooses to be good, until his wife years later becomes pregnant and that darkness inside him stirs. He doesn't want to one day in a fit of rage kill his own daughter, so on the night of her birth, he leaves the hospital to kill his first child to suppress the monster inside so he won't harm his own flesh and blood. But he keeps killing, eventually also killing his wife after she discovered his secret basement room and his daughter promises not to tell even though she does, leading to his arrest and her adoption. The rest will be a retelling of the original backstory. The conclusion will jump forward to the present after in Springwood after the epic battle of camp crystal lake. The first half will follow the new generation of Elm street teens and introduce a newcomer from new Orleans with a YouTube channel on the unexplained and paranormal who's tag name is Dreamcatcher. She starts to dig into the towns history with the teens telling a vague description of an urban legend of the towns Boogeyman. After nightmare 5, the dream child and Freddy's dead the final nightmare, there is no where are they now as far as his daughter or Alice who over the years but Freddy behind them in Alice's case and his daughter staying behind to protect the people of Springwood after she kills her father. Now Freddy always aimed at no survivors, so after Dreamcatcher digs too much and brings Freddy back and makes a big mistake telling of Freddy on her YouTube channel which is global, the three have to enter the dream one last time for one last showdown. With dreams being dreams, anything is possible, and they are able to reach the first teen to ever face Freddy, Nancy. They all must put their power together to end him once and for all, which they know will take more than them. It will take having to wake the three who gave Freddy his power from the start, the three son's of hypnos. Once Freddy sees year later the man from the bar and starts to put things together, it will prove to be an epic showdown with the end showing the three demons choosing their next candidate to continue fetching them souls. With a true beginning, finally after almost 40 years, and a reprisal of Robert Englund as Freddy in one last nightmare that leads to endless possibilities, this is how it seems the legacy of Freddy should continue and we'll continue to never sleep again.
Word has it a secret bidding war happened back in June and Blumhouse was the winner. We'll see how this pans out.
My biggest fear is they hop on the streaming bandwagon and turn it into a series. I could only see it working if they did like in Freddy's Nightmares and make the stories detached from Freddy for the most part or keep his inclusion minimal and special. Movies are where it's at for me at least.
Quote from: Elm Street Survivor on November 07, 2023, 05:16:24 PM
My biggest fear is they hop on the streaming bandwagon and turn it into a series. I could only see it working if they did like in Freddy's Nightmares and make the stories detached from Freddy for the most part or keep his inclusion minimal and special. Movies are where it's at for me at least.
I disagree. I think Freddy's Nightmares would've been a huge success if every episode was about Freddy, if the episodes were based on the movies. That's not to say it was a flop: I think the series had some great episodes, and some were actually very graphic!😳But I think most Nightmare fans (myself included) probably didn't want to see random characters in the series suffering some sort of mishap or trauma in Springwood. The hardcore Nightmare fans would've wanted to see all the episodes involving Freddy, him going after teenagers in their dreams, figuring out a way how to destroy him. I know it becomes tedious when you constantly have the same storyline every episode, but I think New Line could've worked around it. That's just my opinion.
Hmmm, I wonder how accurate this is:
"ROBERT ENGLUND OPEN TO RETURNING AS FREDDY KRUEGER — UNDER ONE CONDITION !
Robert Englund, the legendary actor who defined the terror of Freddy Krueger, has recently hinted at the possibility of reprising his iconic role-yet he firmly insists on one non-negotiable condition. In a candid statement, Englund revealed that he would only return if the project's creative vision truly honors the dark, twisted essence that made Freddy a household name in horror. He emphasized that any new script or reboot must maintain the original's blend of relentless scares, biting wit, and a haunting atmosphere, ensuring that the character's legacy is preserved without compromise. This stipulation not only underscores Englund's passion for the franchise but also his desire to see a modern retelling that pays respectful homage to its chilling roots. As whispers of a revival begin to circulate, fans are on edge with anticipation-could this be the spark that reignites the nightmare on Elm Street? Only time will tell if the visionaries behind the project can meet Englund's exacting standard, but one thing is certain: if he returns, Freddy Krueger's reign of terror will be more menacing than ever."
Well he's not getting any younger at 77. I bet they will wait until he passes then try to capitalize on his death and make one. Ugh.
I may be in a very slim majority but I say start out over with new cast including Freddy. Robert is to old and the makeup wouldn't work. I think ANOES is too brilliant a concept to not make more movies. But it all starts with finding an actor to fill Roberts shoes.