glennbyrnes
Well-Known Member
According to comicbook.com, Disney plans to either reboot, revive, or make a live-action version of Kim Possible.
There already was a live-action Kim Possible film released.According to comicbook.com, Disney plans to either reboot, revive, or make a live-action version of Kim Possible.
I don't know. The more I hear about it, the more likely it seems.Here is the Comic Book article: Disney Reportedly Planning to Revive One of Its Biggest Animated Shows
It seems like for now it's simply an idea from Disney, but nothing concrete is in development yet.
It might work. They continued Totally Spies and The Winx Club even after the girls graduated from high school.Do we really need to do this? The show ended perfectly fine with graduating from high school, why does everything need to get a revival nowadays?
If done correctly, yes!It might work. They continued Totally Spies and The Winx Club even after the girls graduated from high school.
They never finished World of Winx, cliffhanger remember?It might work. They continued Totally Spies and The Winx Club even after the girls graduated from high school.
Apparently, there was a revival or some kind of sequel series in-talks as far back as 2020 but according to SAG-AFTRA listings the registration has been dormant since and was likely silently scrapped.I enjoy Kim the way it is please don't reboot Kim
It's going to happen eventually. Nothing is truly dead anymore.
They'll bring back anything just for it's recognizability. Kim Possible was right next to Phineas and Ferb in most recognizable series along with Lilo and Stitch which will probably also get a new series announced unless I haven't heard about it yet and it's already in the works.
This isn't anything new it's been happening for decades (just look at the 90s line-ups.) It's just far more noticeable today where we have next-to-no new IP to coincide with it. And if we do, it's canned after 1 season with overnight drops on D+ for the dedicated viewer base to go dig up. Appointment television used to at least expose viewers to shows and it they changed the channel or not was the deciding factor on if they had a hit or a flop.The idea is that networks & studios are convinced "pre-sold product", or, established properties, would be a good lure to bring viewers back. Doesn't always work.