Premature Sequelization: Sequel culture runs amok. And this time it's personal.
The news Wednesday that Disney has already commissioned the writers of the December movie "Tron Legacy" to write a second (and possibly third) film in the rebooted franchise is only the latest example. Last year Warner Bros. created a stir when it seemed to move forward with a "Hangover" sequel two months before the film was released.
In some ways, there's a logic to what studios are trying to do. Companies shell out millions on development anyway; if executives think they have a hit on their hands, they may as well put a marker on an existing property. There's also a timing issue: Hits are scarce and investors want results quickly, so better to maximize every bit of available time.
A quick turnaround on a sequel is also, not coincidentally, a savvy political move. If you're a studio executive worried about whether a film will be a hit, pushing forward a sequel is as good a way as any to telegraph confidence to your colleagues and bosses (and also, presuming the studio wants the news out there, to audiences).
But in watching sequel-mania hit earlier and earlier, it's tempting to ask these cowboys to slow down. Part of the defense for premature sequelization is inevitably that a studio isn't really committing to anything; they can, after all, always change the script or chuck it and start over if they don't like it.
But developing a sequel months before a movie comes out sends a questionable, if not hubristic, message to audiences -- "We're thinking about cramming another movie down your throat, and before you've even told us if you've liked the first one."
It also risks suffocating a process that, while always at least part calculation, in some circumstances can be organic. The best sequels grow out of not just the original film but the reception to it. Plenty of movies whose sequels outdid the original -- everything from "The Godfather" to "Spider-Man" -- happened that way because writers got a chance to consider both the mythology and the reception to it. Start writing a new film before you fully know what you have with the first one and you risk missing what makes the original worthwhile (and worthy of a sequel in the first place).
We get that there's a desire to go quickly. But there are also reasons to wait, and not really much downside to doing so. Take your time, Hollywood. We're not going anywhere.
--Steven Zeitchik
Photo: "Jaws" sequel DVD cover. Credit: Universal Pictures Home Video








who loves the movie Jaws?
Posted by: Julia Simone | 04/07/2010 at 09:23 AM
"Take your time, Hollywood. We're not going anywhere." --- Yes, especially not to the movies, 3D or no 3D. Babysitters, parking hassles, people on the phone, etc. --- Or prices in NYC close to $20 per seat. --- The movie bigwigs have made too many TV series, where the next show is more important than doing a good job on this show.
Posted by: Bill | 04/07/2010 at 09:45 AM
You failed to mention the primary reason the studios start working on the sequel early...it's a lot cheaper to lock in the cast and crew before the movie becomes a huge hit.
Posted by: Sean | 04/07/2010 at 01:50 PM
Another thing they do is create the sequel with the original movie or sometimes they make all three movies. Lord of the Rings created all three movies at once. Pirates of the Caribean made the first movie, but then signed on to make the second and third at the same time.
Posted by: Neil | 04/08/2010 at 10:58 AM
I wrote a sequel to Friday the 13th. I started the day I saw it in the theater.
I'm kind of writing the same for a WESTERN but backwards.
Posted by: KHjll | 04/10/2010 at 12:42 PM
I love sequels I think of them like T.V. serials in a way to continue great characters for what ever reason.
4 KINDS of sequels,
one written with the first as part of a whole.
One paid to be written before the first film is realsed.
One paid for after the film was released.
One inpired by the first film.
Posted by: KHjll | 04/10/2010 at 12:45 PM
The HUSTLER and COLOR OF MONEY
Posted by: KHjll | 04/10/2010 at 01:30 PM