Thinking in Print: When fanfiction goes too far
Note: Contains mentions of suicide and major spoilers for Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Dean Koontz’s Frankenstein and Peter Ackroyd’s The Casebook of Victor Frankenstein.
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Note: Contains mentions of suicide and major spoilers for Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Dean Koontz’s Frankenstein and Peter Ackroyd’s The Casebook of Victor Frankenstein.
The Miami Valley Centre Mall today is in a sad state.
If creating science fiction at the age of 18 wasn’t cool enough, the author of “Frankenstein,” Mary Shelley, also published an apocalyptic novel called, “The Last Man,” in 1826. This is a text that focuses on a global pandemic in the 21st century that creeps up on people too obsessed with political elections. The people don’t care about the plague until it’s too late. Like that would ever happen, am I right?
In the last two years, Nickelodeon has announced plans for a plethora of “SpongeBob SquarePants” spin-offs such as “Kamp Koral,” “The Patrick Star Show” and an untitled music-based Squidward project by Netflix. Given the show's popularity, one may ask what took Nickelodeon so long to expand the universe of their beloved franchise?
With calls to boycott Disney’s latest live-action film "Mulan" underway, it raises the idea that politics aside, all live-action remakes should be boycotted. What may seem like a cheap cash grab capitalizing on 90s kids' nostalgia has far greater ramifications on the entertainment industry.