There was a Spi...dea. (Sony, Spider-Man Producer Quest)

Voting has officially ended, here are the results!

Adhoc vote count started by Yite on Jan 30, 2022 at 2:41 AM, finished with 20 posts and 16 votes.
 
66- Spider-Man: Flight of The Vulture, Reshoots.
[X] Plan Triage
-[X] Sound Design: 2.
-[X] Aunt May (Maggie Smith): 24.
-[X] Delsin Rowe (Booboo Stewart): 25.
-[X] Aaron Davis (Mike Colter): 31.
-[X] Liz-Allen Toomes (Mischa Barton): 50.
-[X] Spider-Man: Flight of The Vulture.

You decided to reshoot Maggie, Booboo's, Mike's, and Mischa's scenes within the movie, while also getting the sound team to... somehow fix this catastrophic mess, delaying the movie by a month to do so.

Sound Design Reroll: 74.

Thankfully, one of the people on the sound team had most of the sound and music on a hard drive, so they could work from home, and they brought it back to work, and managed to salvage the sound for the movie.

Aunt May (Maggie Smith) Screen Presence Reroll: 89.

After Maggie had gotten better, she redid her scenes practically perfectly, showing off parental affection for Andrew Garfield's Peter Parker, and how proud she was in him.

Delsin Rowe (Booboo Stewart) Screen Presence Reroll: 80.

After taking a while to get better, Booboo had gone back to the role of Delsin Rowe with an ease you hadn't expected.

He was really fun to watch, which gave you some ideas to include him in future projects. He would definitely be a fun character to have around.

Aaron Davis (Mike Colter) Screen Presence Reroll: 89.

Mike had definitely figured out what sort of character Aaron Davis would be, and it had shown in the reshoots.

You could definitely see him as a future Prowler, if you go that route.

Liz Allen-Toomes (Mischa Barton) Screen Presence Reroll: 92.

Somehow, Mischa Barton had managed to make the character of Liz Allen-Toomes her own, and you really enjoyed it.

You really liked her few scenes in the movie.

After that, you decided to name the movie... Spider-Man: Flight of The Vulture.

Now, it was time for the movie to actually be released.

And to be honest? You're kind of nervous, after all... the first script was utter trash, then you had to delay the movie by a month... hopefully, nothing else would go wrong.
____

Well, those were some pretty damn good rerolls. Now, I'm going to be working on the results of the movie.

Let's hope they're good.
 
67- Box Office and Reception: Spider-Man: Flight of The Vulture. (December 28th, 2013)
Spider-Man: Flight of The Vulture.



"Gwen, I have something to tell you... I am Spider-Man"

Directed By: Edgar Wright.

Starring: Andrew Garfield, Emilia Clarke, Daniel Radcliffe, Michael Keaton.

Critic Score: 80.

Audience Score: 83.

Critic Buzz:
83.

Fandom Buzz:
85.

You had released the movie in late December, a little bit after Christmas Day, just barely managing to get it out before 2014 started.

The critics and fans had both really liked the movie, so that was good.

The fans and critics especially loved the continuation of the relationship between Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy.

They really enjoyed Michael Keaton as Adrian Toomes, The Vulture. Which was nice to see.

They'd also loved Emma Watson's take on Emma Frost, having truly enjoyed the character.

Alexander Ludwig's Cole MacGrath was really well-liked among audiences and critics.

People also really enjoyed Willem Dafoe's return to the role of Norman Osborne, and really enjoyed the mid-credit scene with him and Emma Frost, revealing him as the man behind the shadowy figures.

The fans and critics had also loved the editing and VFX for the movie.

The fans and critics were also absolutely shocked by the post-credit scene, not seeing the sheer amount of destruction coming.

And now, it was time to see what the box office of the movie was.

Domestic Box Office: $725,326,932.
International Box Office: $447,643,657.
Merchandise: $75,324,987.
_____
Total Box Office: $1,248,295,576.
Production Budget: $120,000,000.
_____
Final Box Office: $1,128,295,576.


Well, you made a billion dollars again.

At this point? You weren't even surprised. It was Spider-Man, after all.

Now... you had to get to work on the inFamous show.

Mid-Credit Scene: Norman Osborne is revealed to be the one behind the shadowy figures having met Shocker and Luke Cage, Emma Frost by his side to imply the two of them being our own version of the Hellfire Club.

Post-Credit Scene: Spider-Man swings around Manhattan before his Spidey Sense goes off, and then... he sees Cole in the middle of Wall Street, before a massive explosion sounds out. He instantly starts barreling toward the site of the explosion, with a sense of slowly dawning horror creeping into the scene's ambiance and Peter's voice, and here... Luke Cage catches up to Spider-Man, but in the face of such destruction, he puts aside the job to help the people in danger.

Cameo: Stan Lee is one of the lecturers at Empire State University.
 
Are there any other ideas than going with the games plot

Not that I don't like it, I'd just like other options.
 
You had released the movie in late December, a little bit after Christmas Day, just barely managing to get it out before 2014 started.

The critics and fans had both really liked the movie, so that was good.

The fans and critics especially loved the continuation of the relationship between Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy.

They really enjoyed Michael Keaton as Adrian Toomes, The Vulture. Which was nice to see.

They'd also loved Emma Watson's take on Emma Frost, having truly enjoyed the character.

Alexander Ludwig's Cole MacGrath was really well-liked among audiences and critics.

People also really enjoyed Willem Dafoe's return to the role of Norman Osborne, and really enjoyed the mid-credit scene with him and Emma Frost, revealing him as the man behind the shadowy figures.

The fans and critics had also loved the editing and VFX for the movie.

The fans and critics were also absolutely shocked by the post-credit scene, not seeing the sheer amount of destruction coming.

And now, it was time to see what the box office of the movie was.
I hope you don't take this the wrong way, but I think the description of the movie release seems a bit bland? It's basically:
They liked ______
They loved _________
_____ was well-liked.
_______ was well received.
I think you should add a bit more to it because it seems kind of underwhelming. Might I suggest looking at There Was A Different Idea: An MCU Producer Quest for inspiration? Or maybe You're Gonna Be a Star, Kid (Star Wars Holovid Producer Quest).
 
I think the events of the Infamous games would work well in a episodic format like a tv series.
Just have a few writers split up and modify the game scripts to fit a 1 hour episode format and it should do just fine.
 
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I think that, for our purposes, we should keep towards the themes of the first game but move towards a fusion of two or three other plotlines.

To start, we keep the No Man's Land narrative, that after the explosion the entirety of the Island of Manhattan was quarantined off, that the initial riots give way to various criminal enterprises taking complete advantage of the situation, essentially brining NYC back to the '70s and '80s. This gives us the opportunity to not only explore the Crime and Gangster genres, but also Punk and Revenge because of the location of the Ray Sphere Explosion, Wall Street.

It's here, in the absolute madhouse the island has become, that we get our first glimpses of Kingpin as he rises to the top, Frank Castle getting trampled in the process, and Daredevil rising to protect his community. We get to see FEAST as it struggles to hold a community together, Aunt May, Claire Temple and Trish Daily at the forefront taking care of the people. We see Max Dillion become Electro, a reluctant villain, in order to help his [girlfriend/fiancé] suffering from the Ray Sphere Plague, juxtaposing him against Cole's more heroic actions. We see Mark Allen-Toomes become Molten Man, his mental deterioration from fairly well adjusted to an outright beast of a villain, serving as a reminder and a fear of Cole's that Conduit's are doomed to become Monsters. We tie the mysterious mystical experiment Mysterio was part of to the Ray Sphere Explosion, a slow and protracted journey from anti-villain to hero in a bid to redeem himself. Spider-Man and Luke Cage always in the background doing everything in their power to help, inspiring the people because they are there, actively helping the community in a way that no other hero [to date] is shown doing on screen.

As for Cole himself? He's running himself ragged in an attempt to fix everything, bouncing from tragedy to tragedy in a mockery of Spider-Man's mantra, where he teeters between hero and villain until Trish's death...with her final words, he accepts the harder road and becomes a hero, openly clashing against Kessler and his ideals.

The final scene of the series is the quarantine being broken, Delsin and Fetch being the first to escape across the border to a tomorrow on faith that it'll be a better day, the both of them fleeing to Seattle, Cole not far behind, himself fleeing to New Orleans to hunt rumors of the Beast, a mirror of FotV's Post Credits, Cole looking back at Spider-Man.
 
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68- inFamous Plot Vote.
Well, it was happening. You were starting your first TV series, and honestly?

You were sort of nervous to be making the inFamous show, it was your first show after all.

You had to figure out the plot of it, first of all.

So, you... needed ideas to use for it. And you looked to the games for your ideas, even the one that was still in development.

What is the plot of the inFamous show?

[] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least.
[] It's an anthology series of various Conduits awakening their own powers, with vastly different stories to go through. You think it could be an interesting way to explore the different ways people interact with their newly-gained powers.
[] You had the idea of exploring more of Mysterio's experiments, and how that gave rise to the Elementals and Conduits, giving the fans an openly villainous series that would explore what New York City is like on the villain side of the fence.
[] Then, there was this idea you had, of having Delsin Rowe, and a Conduit by the name of Fetch who's going to appear in the new inFamous game that's still in development. The two of them are trying to escape from the New York City quarantine to get back to their families. Delsin wouldn't have any... known powers, and his storyline would focus on the powerlessness of the commonfolk in the wake of this rise in superpowers, while Fetch's on the other hand would focus on the themes of fear and holding back your potential, before ultimately accepting who you are. You thought this could be an interesting take on the inFamous show.
[] Write-in:
_____

Alright, this is a fairly small update, but... fairly important for how we progress with the inFamous show.
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
Question are in this univerce Conduits the same as mutants?
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least.
 
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[X] It's an anthology series of various Conduits awakening their own powers, with vastly different stories to go through. You think it could be an interesting way to explore the different ways people interact with their newly-gained powers.
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
[X] You want to keep it at least somewhat true to the original game. Cole MacGrath wakes up a month after the explosion that shook New York, and discovers his new electrokinetic ability, along with the fact that various other people have turned into these... 'Conduits', as they're called. During his research into what caused the explosion, he discovers that the explosive was actually something called a Ray Sphere. Determined to discover more about the Ray Sphere, he begins looking into the company that hired him, only having a single name to go by... Kessler. Now, it's Cole's job to find who this Kessler is, and take them down. That's the very basics of the idea, at least
 
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