Hollywood thinking today is to release sequels to practically any blockbuster…which is why in 2007 we saw a rash of threequels: Spider-Man 3, Shrek the Third, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, Ocean’s Thirteen, The Bourne Ultimatum, and Rush Hour 3. All of those films made oodles of cash, showing if at first you do succeed, try, try again until you’ve milked it dry.
Surprisingly, even some classic and well-renowned films have been given sequels, but needless to say, they have not become classics. Most of the films on the following list were not intended as “official” sequels, but nevertheless continued the stories and characters of earlier classics. Unofficial sequels can work well… a few such films are very popular, like The Lion in Winter (a “sequel” to Becket since Peter O’Toole plays King Henry II in both films) and The Silence of the Lambs (technically a sequel to Manhunter, even though Frankie Faison is the only actor in both films). However, most of the following failed miserably, as audiences preferred the unspoilt originals.
Universal tried to repeat the success they had with the 1973 classic starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford. They failed. By replacing the original’s two huge stars — the reason The Sting was so great — with Jackie Gleason and Mac Davis, the filmmakers basically acknowledged they were making a second-rate sequel. The film failed, and The Sting II was banished to the forgotten film vault in the sky.
The Wiz it ain’t. Disney’s sequel to the classic The Wizard of Oz came 46 years after the 1939 original – earning this sequel a place in the record books. Unfortunately, that is about all this is known for, as it was a commercial and critical failure. Director Walter Murch reportedly wanted only scant references to the original film, with the intention of remaining faithful to the L. Frank Baum novels; for instance, the Tin Man, Scarecrow, and Cowardly Lion are only briefly in the film. But why do that when the whole point of this sequel was to capitalize on the success of the original?
George C. Scott reprised his role as the no-nonsense General George S. Patton in this CBS TV Movie. Like the original, it’s based on a book by Ladislas Farago; the setting this time is after World War II, when General Patton is dying after a car accident. With his wife (Eva Marie Saint) at his bedside, the General reminiscences about his good ol’ pre-WWII days. Ron Berglas plays young Patton. Why such a classic war film like 1970′s Patton would get a simple TV-movie sequel is beyond me, especially if they were able to convince George C. Scott to reprise his role. The movie ranked ninth in the ratings for the night, but one wonders if audiences weren’t keen on seeing such a bombastic man go out with a whimper instead of a bang.
Nick Tate, Timothy Bottoms, Edward Fox, and George Takei (!) all star in this war epic follow-up to the 1957 classic The Bridge on the River Kwai. It’s based on a 1979 book by Joan and Clay Blair, which in turn is based on a true story. The plot concerns the workers of the previous bridge who, after it is blown up, are shipped to Japan. Along the way, there is much war-related action.
One year after the original was re-released to theatres, an unofficial TV sequel was produced with Ralph Fiennes in the titular role. Shown on PBS’ “Great Performances” in 1992, the movie dealt with Lawrence at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference following World War I. The New York Times called Fiennes’ peformance more authentic than Peter O’Toole’s, as in this movie it portrayed him as a complicated, ambivalent, and dark man, rather than a flamboyant, swashbuckling hero. Steven Spielberg reportedly saw Fiennes’ performance in this and asked him to sign up as a Nazi in Schindler’s List.
Filmation, an animation studio known for Star Trek: The Animated Series and Fat Albert, came up with the brilliant idea in the 1980s to produce sequels to classic Disney films. Their first one was Happily Ever After, a “sequel” to the 1937 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs picking up where the first left off. Snow White meets the Seven Dwarfelles, cousins of the Dwarves, and they team up to destroy the evil Lord Malice. Despite a big-name cast (Ed Asner, Carol Channing, Zsa Zsa Gabor, and Malcolm McDowell), the film was received poorly by just about everyone. Filmation did produce one other Disney “sequel,” Pinocchio and the Emperor of The Night, which had a great title but nothing else going for it.
A Christmas Story is a beloved Christmas classic. Its sequel more than a decade later is not. Kieran Culkin takes over as Ralphie, whose quest deals not with obtaining a Red Ryder BB Gun, but some kind of top (a dice) to pit against some bully’s top. WTF? Tedde Moore returns as Ralphie’s teacher, and Jean Shepherd narrates, but the rest of the original cast is kaput. MGM later retitled this My Summer Story; you probably don’t want this on your Christmas list.
Alexandra Ripley’s 1991 novel of the same name, a sequel to Gone With the Wind, was turned into a TV miniseries in 1994. Joanna Whalley played Scarlett O’Hara and Timothy Dalton took over as the dashing and suave Rhett Butler. Not taking “I don’t give a damn” for an answer, Scarlett attempts to win back Rhett’s heart, traveling to Ireland in the process. This eight-hour miniseries, aired on CBS during the November sweeps, garnered substantial ratings, but ones less than hoped for by the network. The era of the epic miniseries was over. Still, it’s probably worth enough to take a look, if you can find it on video– after all, Sean Bean is in it, playing the evil Lord Fenton.
One of those “technically a sequel” films. The 1980 film Raise the Titanic featured Richard Jordan as Dirk Pitt, a role sent to Matthew McConaughey in Sahara. Both are based on Clive Cussler’s novels of the treasure-hunting Dirk Pitt, and both had tremendous budgets (and consequently were tremendous failures). Raise the Titanic’s producer lamented that it would’ve been cheaper to “lower the Atlantic.” Some reference to the first film can be found during the opening credits, when a clipping in Dirk Pitt’s office references a “raising the Titanic.”
OK, you’ve heard of The Queen, but did you know that it is essentially a sequel to the 2003 TV Movie The Deal? Both movies feature Michael Sheen as Tony Blair, and both were written by Peter Morgan and directed by Stephen Frears. The Deal is based on a supposed meeting between Tony Blair and current PM Gordon Brown, with Blair telling Brown to step aside and allow him to run as Labour Party leader while allowing Brown sway over domestic policy.
Contributor: Peter B-P






























I have seen Return to Oz. CREEPY!!! Head hunting queen. *shivers* I had nightmares as a kid. Now I let my girls watch it in hope they get nightmares! *giggles* I OWN Scarlett on dvd and DID have it on vhs. It does not follow the GWTW story exactly but if viewed as what it is, a made for tv mini series “based” off a book, its ok. Hell in this one she actually goes through troubles other then the implied attempted rape on the balcony by the “damn yankee” and cotton picking. Scarlett goes through alot of crap, even BEING raped! The costumes are nice and there are some BEAUTIFUL horses in it! It’s worth a look I think. I saw happily ever after as a tweenager and HATED it!!!! Bad art, horrible voice acting and even crappier story!! *BLEH!!*
Return to Oz was a great movie in my opinion. I’d be more hopped up to show it to my niece rather then the sugary Wizard of OZ of the 40s. Kudos to the director who tried to showcase the wonderful books.
As for bad sequels somebody mentioned the Land Before Time which was a great movie turned into a lame series of crap. I’m voting for the Candyman sequels. An awesome scary movie with two cheesy horrible sequels
Um yeah I saw Return to Oz and it gave me nightmares.
Also, what about 2010 starring John Gleason as part of the team that tries to figure out what happened to the original crew? It’s the sequel to 2001: A Space Odyssey but I rarely ever hear it mentioned.
I had Happily Ever After as a kid and I loved it!
Speaking of Land Before Time, this website comes to mind… http://ekarj.com/landbeforetime.htm. Pretty funny stuff.
Hard to believe there will soon be 14 of them!
Return to OZ was trippy!
Ah yes my years of working at a video store did cause me to know about most of these forgettable films. Didn’t know the Queen was a sequel though.
People, I know we all have struggled to bury the memory of “Three men and a little lady” very deep into our non-conscious minds, but apparently Tom Selleck and the guys are coming back!
http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/movies/a136826/three-men-team-reunite-for-sequel.html?imdb
Im watching return to oz right now on YouTube
Gina: For some reason that direct link didn’t work but I clicked on “articles” and then clicked on the top article and it brought me back to the same link but the page you were intending actually showed up that time…weird
I don’t know if you would file this under bad…forgotten…or pointless…sequel–but does anyone remember “More American Graffiti”. Had the same great cast as the first great movie (minus Richard Dreyfuss), but absolutely no story given the poignant ending of the first.
Yeah, I’m dumb and punctuated the link. It’s supposed to be http://ekarj.com/landbeforetime.htm Hopefully that works!
Happily Ever After was one of my favorite movies growing up!
Scarlett was horrid… mainly due to casting, in my opinion. Neither can hold a candle to the original stars of Gone With the Wind of course, but both were stiff and it appeared as though they had never acted before.
The book was marvelously done. The movie, not worth the money to rent it. It’s shown occasionally on TV.
Has any ever seen The French Connection 2?
just a note in the deal it was brown asking blair to step aside as blair was the prime minester….
little details…
Count me in with the group who liked “Return to Oz” That movie freaked me out. Especially the desert that turned people to sand!!
I have not seen any of these movies,but all the comments about Return to OZ makes me want to see it.
Oh…my…God…I had completely forgotten about Return to Oz. Back when Disney actually showed interesting movies on the Disney Channel, they played Return to Oz. I only saw bits and pieces, and it confused me supremely. Then…
They never showed anything good again
I have to say, Happily Ever After was terrible… I was so disappointed as a kid. But I LOVE the Return to Oz for some reason. I mean, it starts off with Dorothy in a mental ward for children and I always loved the search for green at the end of the film
Great list! I’ve seen three of the ten, for what it’s worth. Return to Oz was terrifying when I was a kid, but I still love it. In fact, I’m going to go watch it now, since it’s been brought up. (Yes, I actually love it enough to own it…)
Wow, I was mostly surprised at The Last Days of Patton TV movie. I missed that one all together even though I loved the original. Maybe George C. Scott had a bad agent or something at that time. Most of these you would think they would be able to see the writing on the wall. Nice description on these forgettable films by the way Peter B-P. Probably better some of these movies.
Randall – Caddyshack II — AUGH!! What a horrid movie.
I also loved Return to Oz. It’s a total classic for me, even if it is a little dark. The room full of heads used to freak me out as a kid, but I still loved it.
I remember watching Scarlett when it aired and thinking that it really sucked. Really really sucked.
I saw Happily Ever After as a kid, but I can’t remember anything about it. I’ve seen It Runs in the Family, and although it isn’t nearly as good as A Christmas Story, I thought it was pretty good.
I’m also in agreement with everyone else that Return to Oz is an amazingly creepy and awesome movie. I’ve got it on DVD. I think I ordered it from amazon.com
Return to Oz scared the crap out of my 9 year old self.
The asylum scene? And the Wheelers?
TERRIFYING.
I guess I can count myself lucky in that I have seen *none* of the films on the list. I avoid sequels on principle, unless they are part of a set-piece; Star Wars, Lord of the Ring…
The Godfather sequels I did see, since the first was so incredible, and the sequels carried on with the actors and characters. Even so, they didn’t quite match up.
Oh well, I’d rather read anyway.
Dear Listverse,
Never, ever shut down. I look forward to reading these lists daily, even during class.
home alone 4?
I grew up on Return To Oz. One of my fondest movies.
Fairuza Bulk (the crazy girlfriend from American History X) played dorothy.
Yea it was scary as hell. The headless Princess Mombie. Might have to watch it tonight now.Sorry for the triple post.
but i’ve heard of The Queen…
Return to Oz was a great Sequel! I loved how it was actually ‘based’ on the book and not randomly made to fit the audience (like the Musical).
I really like Sahara. I have the DVD. lol! Not knowing anything about the books, I found it to be very fun and engaging.
i saw happily ever after when i was very young and loved it, then watched it again as a teenager and couldn’t stand it. so sorry, i HAVE heard of at least one
how bout a sequel to ‘SOUL PLANE” ? thatll be scary
OH, i remember seeing Sahara in the cinema. I never knew it was a sequel, and it did suck ass. Seriously. Half the time I didn’t know what the hell was going on.
Return to Oz was one of my favortie movies abck in the day. I’d actually like to see it again…lunchbox trees! LOL
I saw Return to OZ, I liked it as a kid, though those wheel guys turning to sand was freaky.
I remember a made-for-tv sequel to “It’s a Wonderful Life” called “Clarence.” It was about the angel coming back to Earth for another assignment. It was awful.
great list! what a good, querky topic.
I really don’t understand why The Queen is number one. Yes I didn’t know it was a sequal to something else, but this is the top ten unknown sequals and that movie was pretty well known… Didn’t the actress win an Oscar for the role?
P.S. I heard Return to Oz is weird and good. I really want to see it.
Disney has made huge bucks cranking out crappy straight-to-DVD sequels to their classics, much like Happily Ever After. Cinderella 2 and 3? Little Mermaid 2 and 3? Belle’s Christmas? It goes on and one, each one is worse and worse than the classic original. Obviously, Disney doesn’t care about keeping those classics sacred. It’s all about the buck, and quality be damned.
I actually saw part of number eight when it aired. I only remember it because I was a young kid, and I saw the part where they had to put the hooks in his cheeks for whatever reason, I think it had to do with his neck and it being broken in the accident. As a young, and at that time incorrupt and innocent one, that was a traumatic thing to see.
Wow. I didn’t realize so many people loved ‘Return to Oz’. My hubby bought it a while back and tried to convince me it was a good film. I still haven’t watched it. Sunday tomorrow, might have a peek at it then.
I’ll be back with my thoughts.
You learn something new every day
Never seen any of em
103. steve d
Couldn’t agree more. I can’t stand those horrible straight-to-DVD “movies.” To their credit though, the current Disney management is phasing out the sequels, AND they’re returning to a medium that they never should have left: Traditional 2D animation. Do a Google search of “The Princess and the Frog.” It shows promise
Return To Oz was an awesome movie. Awesome special effects, costumes, stages, action scenes, and very original characters. It’s 1 of the best movies ever made that failed.
yeah i definitely remember Return to Oz and i actually liked that movie. Definitely a great movie to watch imo
Yeah, I saw the Deal on TV a few years ago, quite a good film to be honest, very obviously linked to the Queen. The Deal was quite famous in the UK actually
Hey, I love Return to Oz! Watching it makes me feel like I have a fatally high fever. I know of no other movie that can do that.
Ive seen Lawrence after Arabia. We watched it in school years ago because the teacher couldnt be bothered sitting through all of the first one.
First time commenter, only because my sister and I LOVED LOVED LOVED Return to Oz soooo much as kids. It was our favorite movie, and I still remember sitting in my grandparents’ Rec Room, literally peeking out from behind the couch because we were scared out of our minds. Gets a little slow when Dorothy is saving the crew in the whole “green object” room, but regardless, I LOVE that movie and will have to see if I can find a copy now that I’m grown and grandma’s Rec Room is long gone.
My nana has Happily ever after on video, it used to scare me to death when i was little!
[I think im on the right one]
But thats thoe only one ive heard of..
Happily Ever After definitely used the scare the ***** out of me too. Awesome movie for sure though.
I’ve seen 6 of the 10. I hate to admit it but I actually liked The Sting II and Return to Oz.
I love Return to Oz and Happily Ever After.
Steve D: Disney didn’t make Happily Ever After.
What about “The French Connection II”?