ibwolf, I agree with everything you've said, not surprsing since I've been saying much the same thing here and elsewhere for several years.
Let me add to the excellent points you've already raised:
The Teep War is also a self-contained story with a beginning, middle and end, which does
not rely on an extensive knowledge of the series just to make sense of it. From the standpoint of exposition you don't need to spend any more time setting up telepaths, the Psi Corps and the social situation than the first
X-Men movie needed to establish mutants. The rest of the background is just a
given. There are different alien species that function like nation states on Earth. There is an EA that functions like a somewhat more rationally designed U.N. There were a couple of wars that need to be mentioned in the dialogue, just so everybody knows where the various players stand, then its off to the races.
A two hour or slightly longer movie could easily contain such a story. (
Comedies tend to clock in at around 90 minutes. Dramas and adventure flicks are usually around two hours and can go a little past that without cutting into the number of daily showings a theater can schedule. Films of three hours or more are rare precisely because of the lack of turn-over at theaters. The theater operators, who make almost nothing on ticket sales and almost everything on concession stand sales, can't afford to book too many 3 hour plus films.)
The studio knows that the most successful film adaptations from any medium are the ones that appeal to people who never read the book, the comic book, saw the TV show. If you only get the hard core fans of the original, you're not going to make any money. A Teep War film, like
The Wrath of Khan or
The Voyage Home would have very broad appeal because it is an easy to understand "underdog fights back" with lots of really cool SF elements and some space battles. There is almost no other
B5 universe story that has similar qualities. Valen and the Shadow War of 1,000 years ago? Don't think so. That's just backstory for
B5, has no Human viewpoint character and in the end the war isn't even decisive - we know the war that really settles the issue is still to come. This is something that the hard core fans would find fascinating, but not something that would appeal to the general audience. Note that Peter Jackson made
The Lord of the Rings for the big screen, not
The Silmarillion or
The Unfinished Tales. There's a reason for that.
JMS knows how uniquely suited the Teep War story is for the big screen, which is why he's been writing around it in all the subsequent
B5 projects. He also knows how important it is to have the original cast and characters, as ibwolf points out. Not only would the studio want that to appease the fans, but JMS himself has always said that he thought of a theatrical film as a way to reward the cast and crew for all their hard work on the series - since the money is so much better on features. That's another thing that rules out many stories that fans like to speculate on as possibilities, at least as far as theatrical plots are concerned. Warner Bros. would be in big trouble if it dropped $50 to $80 million making a "Origins of the Shadow War" film about the Vorlons, the Shadows and Lorien. There's no way they'd sell enough DVDs to break even on something like that.
It is hard to think of any
other story that could take place in the immediate aftermath of "Objects at Rest" and could therefore involve the whole cast. Besides, the Teep War has been set up to answer questions that JMS deliberately raised in S5,
Crusade and the novels and stories - all written at a time when Warner Bros. was very interested in the idea of a theatrical film. (Enough to pay JMS to write an outline for the project back in 1998, an outline which he has since confirmed involved the Teep War and the Vorlons.) Of course JMS could fool us; Heaven knows he's done it before. But
if the upcoming project is a
theatrical film, I'd be very surprised if it
weren' based on the Teep War.
Regards,
Joe