So I was just thinking about how The Hunger Games has been compared to other such books/films (e.g. Battle Royale, The Running Man) that deal with the same dystopian fascist themes that include people being forced to fight each other as part of a reality TV show.
But not only that, how many fantasy novels and films (e.g. Eragon) nowadays seem to heavily take inspiration from Lord of the Rings, and many in the fantasy genre never seem to deviate from the typical medieval setting of elves, princesses being kidnapped, and a fight against a great evil trying to take over the world and whatnot. I think "Yahtzee" even talked about this in an Extra Punctuation article a while ago.
Can anything truly be original anymore? Have we exhausted the pot of ideas? Not even video games appear exempt from this, as many people back in the day compared the original Crash Bandicoot PS1 trilogy to other successful platformers, like Mario and Sonic (another obvious similarity being that they're both anthropomorphic video game protagonists with special abilities, but Sonic was by no means the first to do that).
By the way, I don't necessarily agree with the above sentiment. I'm just trying to throw it out there for discussion. I think that, of course, originality exists and perseveres due to inner creativity.
But not only that, how many fantasy novels and films (e.g. Eragon) nowadays seem to heavily take inspiration from Lord of the Rings, and many in the fantasy genre never seem to deviate from the typical medieval setting of elves, princesses being kidnapped, and a fight against a great evil trying to take over the world and whatnot. I think "Yahtzee" even talked about this in an Extra Punctuation article a while ago.
Can anything truly be original anymore? Have we exhausted the pot of ideas? Not even video games appear exempt from this, as many people back in the day compared the original Crash Bandicoot PS1 trilogy to other successful platformers, like Mario and Sonic (another obvious similarity being that they're both anthropomorphic video game protagonists with special abilities, but Sonic was by no means the first to do that).
By the way, I don't necessarily agree with the above sentiment. I'm just trying to throw it out there for discussion. I think that, of course, originality exists and perseveres due to inner creativity.