Subject: "What was up".
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Posted on: 2014-03-11 08:54:00 UTC

With the second film, I think they had three very difficult tasks:

1/ To try and fix the continuity problems with the first book. So they had to introduce the Kronos motif, bring Luke back, explain the increased ages (by changing the prophecy... it jarred, but it was better than ignoring it).

2/ To try and stay true to the book, as far as possible, while still fitting it into a film. I was actually surprised they did as well at this as they did - those books are complex.

3/ To try and make a standalone film. That's the reason for Kronos, for what it's worth. Most of the time, films based on a series of books assume the whole series will get made. But Lightning Thief was such a terrible flop that Sea of Monsters almost didn't. If you were making it, would you bank on making the rest of the series?

So they needed a resolution - an actual fight with the Big Bad. And I think it worked... pretty well, actually. It's not what happened in the book, but in the book, Luke never got his hands on the Fleece. What was his plan if he had? Presumably it didn't involve sacrificing a bunch of demigods and turning into Kronos himself - because that's what he ended up doing.

No, I can see it as 'the Fleece will put Kronos back together directly', and what happened in the amusement park as a valid AU scenario. And then they had to work out an ending that could lead into the rest of the series, on the offchance of them being made.

It's not a task I envy. Though I wish they hadn't changed the Prophecy (other than the word 'sixteen').

hS

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