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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. So I watched *Popeye’s Revenge*—one of three Popeye-the-Sailorman-themed horror flicks released this year, now that Popeye’s officially in the public domain.'n'nI’ve also seen *Popeye the Slayer Man*, which I actually prefer.

So I watched *Popeye’s Revenge*—one of three Popeye-the-Sailorman-themed horror flicks released this year, now that Popeye’s officially in the public domain.'n'nI’ve also seen *Popeye the Slayer Man*, which I actually prefer.

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  • Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
    Chris Trottier
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    So I watched Popeye’s Revenge—one of three Popeye-the-Sailorman-themed horror flicks released this year, now that Popeye’s officially in the public domain.

    I’ve also seen Popeye the Slayer Man, which I actually prefer. It’s got more comedy, more lore—whereas Popeye’s Revenge is just the sailor going on a murder spree in a haunted house. No spinach. No Olive Oyl. Which feels like a missed opportunity.

    Anyway, I went down the rabbit hole on the studio behind these films and learned that ITN Studios—no relation to the British news outfit—specializes in low-budget horror built around newly public-domain properties. They’ve already done it with Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh, and they’re apparently building a whole shared universe around it. (Popeye hasn’t joined yet.)

    They churn out something like 97 movies a year, each made for around $30K, flooding VOD services like Prime Video and Tubi. The math is simple: if even one film hits modestly, they turn a profit.

    Some folks get cranky about micro-budget cinema, as if every movie should cost $200M to make. But I see it differently. Just like with games or music, more creators making more stuff is always better than less—and most of these are free to stream anyway.

    Next up on my Popeye-themed watchlist: Shiver Me Timbers.

    Link Preview Image
    Popeye's Revenge (2025) ⭐ 3.2 | Horror

    Popeye's Revenge: Directed by William Stead. With Emily Mogilner, Connor Powles, Danielle Ronald, Bruno Cryan. The legend of Popeye haunts a group of councilors as they intend to open a summer camp.

    favicon

    IMDb (www.imdb.com)

    Link Preview Image
    AFM: ITN Boss Stuart Alson on “First Micro Budget Studio” and Releasing 96 Genre Films Per Year

    ITN Films boss Stuart Alson on being the “first micro-budget studio” and releasing 96 genre titles per year.

    favicon

    The Hollywood Reporter (www.hollywoodreporter.com)

    Michael GemarM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier

      So I watched Popeye’s Revenge—one of three Popeye-the-Sailorman-themed horror flicks released this year, now that Popeye’s officially in the public domain.

      I’ve also seen Popeye the Slayer Man, which I actually prefer. It’s got more comedy, more lore—whereas Popeye’s Revenge is just the sailor going on a murder spree in a haunted house. No spinach. No Olive Oyl. Which feels like a missed opportunity.

      Anyway, I went down the rabbit hole on the studio behind these films and learned that ITN Studios—no relation to the British news outfit—specializes in low-budget horror built around newly public-domain properties. They’ve already done it with Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh, and they’re apparently building a whole shared universe around it. (Popeye hasn’t joined yet.)

      They churn out something like 97 movies a year, each made for around $30K, flooding VOD services like Prime Video and Tubi. The math is simple: if even one film hits modestly, they turn a profit.

      Some folks get cranky about micro-budget cinema, as if every movie should cost $200M to make. But I see it differently. Just like with games or music, more creators making more stuff is always better than less—and most of these are free to stream anyway.

      Next up on my Popeye-themed watchlist: Shiver Me Timbers.

      Link Preview Image
      Popeye's Revenge (2025) ⭐ 3.2 | Horror

      Popeye's Revenge: Directed by William Stead. With Emily Mogilner, Connor Powles, Danielle Ronald, Bruno Cryan. The legend of Popeye haunts a group of councilors as they intend to open a summer camp.

      favicon

      IMDb (www.imdb.com)

      Link Preview Image
      AFM: ITN Boss Stuart Alson on “First Micro Budget Studio” and Releasing 96 Genre Films Per Year

      ITN Films boss Stuart Alson on being the “first micro-budget studio” and releasing 96 genre titles per year.

      favicon

      The Hollywood Reporter (www.hollywoodreporter.com)

      Michael GemarM This user is from outside of this forum
      Michael GemarM This user is from outside of this forum
      Michael Gemar
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      @atomicpoet I have to imagine that AI is going to radically change the economics for these kind of “studios”.

      Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Michael GemarM Michael Gemar

        @atomicpoet I have to imagine that AI is going to radically change the economics for these kind of “studios”.

        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
        Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
        Chris Trottier
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Michael Gemar As long as it’s public domain, I don’t see the problem. No one’s being stolen from, and nobody is being ripped off. After all, we all own the public domain.

        Also, back in the 80s, music sampling created this incredible surge in creativity—brought lots of great works back from the dead. So why not do the same for public domain films?

        Michael GemarM 1 Reply Last reply
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        • Chris TrottierA Chris Trottier

          Michael Gemar As long as it’s public domain, I don’t see the problem. No one’s being stolen from, and nobody is being ripped off. After all, we all own the public domain.

          Also, back in the 80s, music sampling created this incredible surge in creativity—brought lots of great works back from the dead. So why not do the same for public domain films?

          Michael GemarM This user is from outside of this forum
          Michael GemarM This user is from outside of this forum
          Michael Gemar
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          @atomicpoet I’m very happy with folks doing this and reclaiming the public domain. I think it will get even easier to do with AI tools (although I’m not sure what the quality might be).

          Chris TrottierA 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Michael GemarM Michael Gemar

            @atomicpoet I’m very happy with folks doing this and reclaiming the public domain. I think it will get even easier to do with AI tools (although I’m not sure what the quality might be).

            Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
            Chris TrottierA This user is from outside of this forum
            Chris Trottier
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Michael Gemar AI, like all things, is only as good as the work you put into it.

            That is, if anyone thinks they’ll get quality from a singular text prompt, they’re mistaken.

            But if you’re aiming for quality, AI can assist—particularly with aspects that aren’t so creative.

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