Videos by ComicBook.com
This revival trend isn’t going anywhere, either. Throughout the next year or so we’re getting a number of A-tier franchises brought out of dormancy, and we’re glad to say that some of them seem to be going in the exact right direction to keep the property in the public’s mind for a while. Note that we didn’t include anything that was a part of a still-active franchise. For instance, Evil Dead Burn, which is something of a reboot, but there’s just as strong an argument to be made that it’s just a one-off narrative like Evil Dead Rise, and that wasn’t even three years ago.
5) Texas Chainsaw Massacre

The Leatherface saga has been rebooted too many times as is. Once in 1995, then in the early aughts by Platinum Dunes, then again in 2013, 2017, and 2022. It doesn’t help that those final three years released Texas Chainsaw Massacre movies that are all but unwatchable.
But now it’s being done right, or at least as right as can be. A24 is bringing the IP back for both a movie and a streaming series. The streaming series is the more interesting half, considering Glen Powell is a producer and The Long Walk writer JT Mollner will sit in the director’s chair. The question is, have we been inundated with chainsaws to the extent that a project that does it right will still fail?
4) The Mummy

The Mummy is an IP that is getting two reboots. One of them is a revival of the late ’90s and aughts franchise starring Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz. And, because it’s reuniting those two for the first time since 2001 (Maria Bello replaced Weisz in The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor) and is being fueled by ’90s kid nostalgia, it’s almost certainly going to be a hit.
Then there’s Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, coming out on April 17th of this year. A product of Blumhouse and James Wan’s Atomic Monster, this version comes with an entirely new concept to help separate it from all the Imhotep versions that have come before. Not to mention, the teaser trailer for the film is genuinely creepy. This could be a big hit, standing as the diametric opposite of the laughable Tom Cruise version.











