According to you no one knows about Freespace, so when they hear about a show, they'll think "new idea" instead of "old game". You see, you pretty much said it yourself. There isn't enough people who know what freespace is; it would be as good as a new show.
And besides, it wouldn't have to advertise its link to the game. Anyone who doesn't know what Freespace is probably wouldn't care, and anyone who does know what Freespace is would know. But there's only about 10,000 people left throughout the entire world.
So you're saying that they'd make a movie based on a game without advertising that it was based on the game? I doubt that...on top of that, what studio would want to sink millions of dollars into a movie about a game franchise that probably moved less than a million units? It makes no business sense.
What about "original" movies? You know, the ones that aren't based on any franchise? How the hell do they manage to get any auidience?
I tell you how - someone makes a good scrip, some studio likes it and decides to make the movie and the media machine hypes it up and CREATES the demand and a fanbasse for future sequels. Like Matrix...who the hell evern heard of it before?
Do you honestly think that a movie based on a video game with no main character would be good? Um,
hello, even Wing Commander couldn't do it right, and they had the most mega sci fi shooter franchise ever, complete with Mark Hammel (or however you spell his name).
The idea is to promote FreeSpace as not just a game, but a universe that could be picked up and developed into other media. Instead of pitching is as a revival of something old, just pitch it like any new series, as most people have never seen it before.
Again, who would want to invest millions of dollars into a universe that probably made less than that when it was released?
Here's a question to illustrate my point. I played this great game a long time ago called Bughunters or something. Basically the game was about these marines with awesome looking jetpacks that jetted around and there was some inter-stellar war going on, bla bla bla. It was really a fun, kickass game. But it probably sold only a few thousand copies. Would
you be willing to invest your money into a movie based on that game? If you answer no, then why? Let's say it got great reviews and was loved by a tiny die-hard community. These people absolutely love the game and rightly so - but it still only sold about 100,000 copies. Would
you want to invest $20 million in it?