

#Project zero fatal frame 6 movie#
While we might not know when we'll next get a new game, a Fatal Frame/Project Zero movie is in the works, with Silent Hill movie director Christophe Gans confirming he did not want to "uproot the game from its Japanese haunted house setting". The Kyoto-based company also appears to have full ownership of the spin-off Spirit Photography IP and Project Zero 2: Wii Edition, a remake of Project Zero 2: Crimson Butterfly. Nintendo updated its copyright status way back in 2012 to acquire co-ownership of the Fatal Frame IP. Tecmo's Project Zero IP is now co-owned by Nintendo. So in the short-term it's not exactly realistic at the moment." "Another factor would be is that I'm basically overseeing the Gust brand at this moment, and to secure production lines and team members, in the short-term it would also be very difficult, but in the long run I've never really given up the idea. "As for Fatal Frame 2 and 4, Nintendo handles the publishing rights, so we don't exactly have a say in that matter," he added. Kikuchi's also unsure on whether we'll see any remakes of the celebrated horror series, either, but while he's "never really given up on the idea", "it's not exactly realistic at the moment". "So even if I were to say I want to make another game, that doesn't necessarily mean that's what will happen." "Even though I have these hopes, this is a series that Nintendo publishes for us and I only handle the development," Kikuchi told Nintendo Everything. The series producer of Project Zero - or Fatal Frame, as the series was known outside of Europe - Keisuke Kikuchi, says that while he's open to expanding the series, it's ultimately up to IP co-holders Nintendo to decide whether or not we'll get a remake or a new instalment of the terrifying series.
