A natural sequel of an unnatural beginning.
I didn't really want to do another sequel. I go to those movies, and I just sort of enjoy them like a viewer.
[The Girl in the Spider's Web] can't be anything other than a sequel, but a couple of books have been skipped, so it is different, in that sense. It's really taking a very strong central character and thinking, how do you execute this? It's quite different.
There would be no sequel to the sadness
With Katrina, it's almost like the sequel that doesn't live up to the original. It's certainly a shocking event and a tragedy, but somehow as a big event it doesn't seem to carry as much weight with the public as 911 did.
In an ironic twist, I now see Good to Great not as a sequel to Built to Last, but more of a prequel. Good to Great is about how to turn a good organization into one that produces sustained great results. Built to Last is about how you take a company with great results and turn it into an enduring great company of iconic stature.
In a couple of years I think it [sequel to What We Do] will come out as a script and we'll shoot that. Or maybe it will just come out as some t-shirts.
You might have been able to fool people the first time, or something, but you really can't make a successful sequel today unless people really, really liked the predecessor.
With Batman&Robin, the fourth entry in the recent Batman movie series, the profitable franchise appears poised to take a nosedive. This film, which places yet another actor in the batsuit, has all the necessary hallmarks of a sorry sequel - pointless, plodding plotting; asinine action; clueless, comatose characterization; and dumb dialogue. Batman&Robin moves at a dizzying pace, yet goes absolutely nowhere.
Silence is the universal refuge, the sequel to all dull discourses and all foolish acts, a balm to our every chagrin, as welcome after satiety as after disappointment
This World is not Conclusion. A Sequel stands beyond- Invisible, as Music- But positive, as Sound.
I will never write a sequel to anything that I will ever write.
It's always an enormous pressure when you do a sequel. The demands are so high, and it's expensive.
Anything would deserve a sequel if the right elements are there.
For every man who has learned to fight in arms will desire to learn the proper arrangement of an army, which is the sequel of the lesson.
I am actually working on The Neighbors sitcom. We are starting from scratch. I am also working on a comedy movie and a vampire movie. I also have the pilot for The Tommy Wiseau Show and of course The House That Drips Blood On Alex, which we are hoping to make a sequel.
We express our being by creating. Creativity is a necessary sequel to being.
I was concerned about doing a sequel and repeating myself. That was before I read the script.
Every beginning is only a sequel, after all, and the book of events is always open halfway through.
I would LOVE to be in the Star Trek sequel! Yeah! I would love to! I better write that letter to J. J. [Abrahams]