It appears like a dream state of affairs might be creating for A Nightmare on Elm Road followers.
Deadline stories that Paramount has secured the rights to the unique screenplay of A Nightmare on Elm Road, the landmark ’80s slasher movie directed by Wes Craven.
“The thought,” they write, “is to reboot the franchise at Paramount.”
They notice that lately, copyright legislation has allowed the unique creators of profitable franchises (or their estates) to reacquire the rights to their creations, after which to license these rights out to different studios. That’s exactly what occurred within the case of A Nightmare on Elm Road. The unique movies had been launched by New Line Cinema — whose nickname for fairly some time was “The Home That Freddy Constructed” due to the big success of the franchise — however now Paramount controls the rights to develop new movies primarily based on the unique idea.

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New Line launched seven Nightmares between 1984 and 1994, all that includes the monstrous little one assassin Freddy Krueger, who someway manages to outlive his brutal killing by the hands of his victims’ dad and mom, and lives on to hang-out extra children residing on and round Elm Road by invading their desires whereas they sleep in sequel after sequel. All seven movies featured Robert Englund because the vicious, quippy Freddy.
After the unique franchise ran its course, Freddy returned to the massive display screen two extra instances: First in a 2003 crossover sequel with Friday the thirteenth known as Freddy vs. Jason, after which in a remake of the unique A Nightmare on Elm Road, this time with Jackie Earle Haley within the lead function. That was 2010, which means it’s already been 16 years since Freddy tortured youngsters’ nightmares.
Given the continuing reputation of these traditional ’80s slasher franchises like A Nightmare on Elm Road and Friday the thirteenth, a reboot (and even an ongoing streaming TV sequence) seems like a really profitable concept — which now belongs to Paramount.

The 100 Finest ’80s Motion pictures
We named the 100 biggest movies of the Nineteen Eighties. (Or a minimum of our 100 private favorites.)
