
Not all stories need continuations, but when something we’re fans of does, we expect some level of respect for the source material. After all, if we loved something, it’s because of the care and attention the creators gave that product; we only ask that the same care is maintained from movie to movie.
Well, filmmaking is a business, and when something sells, you need to make more. Having no ideas or time to do the next thing is no excuse, apparently, since the machine needs to keep churning content. This is how we end up with sequels that don’t value us as consumers at all.
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Highlander II: The Quickening
The sequel completely rewrote the mythology of the original movie by turning immortals into aliens, instantly alienating fans who loved the fantasy-mysticism approach of the first film.
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Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi
Rian Johnson deliberately challenged audience expectations surrounding Luke Skywalker and franchise mythology, creating one of the most divisive fan reactions in blockbuster history.
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Terminator: Dark Fate
The movie immediately kills John Connor despite years of franchise buildup around his importance, a decision many longtime fans considered outright disrespectful.
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Alien 3
The opening minutes abruptly kill beloved survivors Hicks and Newt offscreen, undoing the hopeful ending of Aliens before the story even properly begins.
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Blues Brothers 2000
The sequel attempted to continue without John Belushi while recycling much of the original movie’s structure, leaving many fans cold immediately.
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Independence Day: Resurgence
The sequel ignored much of what audiences enjoyed about the original, replacing character-driven charm with endless sequel setup and large-scale CGI destruction.
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Speed 2: Cruise Control
Without Keanu Reeves, the sequel abandoned the tense momentum of the original and replaced it with a notoriously slow-moving disaster scenario.
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The Matrix Resurrections
The movie openly mocks franchise reboots and corporate sequel culture so aggressively that some audiences felt the film barely wanted to exist at all.
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Son of the Mask
Rather than capturing the chaotic energy of the original, the sequel transformed the concept into a family comedy that barely resembled the movie audiences remembered.
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Exorcist II: The Heretic
The sequel largely abandoned the grounded horror and psychological dread of The Exorcist in favor of surreal imagery and baffling mythology expansion.
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Pacific Rim: Uprising
Many fans criticized the sequel for losing the scale, atmosphere, and sincerity that made Guillermo del Toro’s original giant-robot movie feel distinctive.
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Mortal Kombat: Annihilation
The sequel recast major characters, overloaded itself with rushed plotlines, and sacrificed coherence entirely in a frantic attempt to include more game references.
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Zoolander 2
Released after years of anticipation, the sequel relied heavily on celebrity cameos and recycled jokes while missing much of the original movie’s satirical edge.
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Jaws: The Revenge
The fourth installment pushed the franchise into near self-parody territory, ignoring realism entirely in favor of a revenge-driven shark somehow stalking one specific family.
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The Rise of Skywalker
The movie aggressively reversed or ignored several ideas introduced in The Last Jedi, creating a sequel many viewers felt was reacting to internet backlash in real time.
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