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14 of the best legacy sequels — and 6 of the worst

Anne Hathaway, Stanley Tucci, Meryl Streep, and Emily Blunt at the world premiere of "The Devil Wears Prada 2."
  • "The Devil Wears Prada 2" is earning positive reviews and is poised to be a box-office hit.
  • Set 20 years after 2006's "The Devil Wears Prada," the movie could be considered a legacy sequel.
  • A legacy sequel takes many years to be made and often stars beloved original characters.

As you might've heard, nostalgia is a powerful thing.

In Hollywood, legacy sequels are on the rise, especially after the successes of films like "Twisters," "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," and "Top Gun: Maverick." However, not all legacy sequels are created equal — for every boundary-pushing film like "The Matrix Resurrections," there are abysmal films such as "Independence Day: Resurgence."

But what Hollywood is learning from these films is that sequels sell. "Spider-Man: No Way Home" made over $1 billion and was the highest-grossing film of 2021, while "Top Gun: Maverick" became the highest-grossing film of Tom Cruise's career, earning $1.5 billion, according to Box Office Mojo data. It could be argued that almost no one liked any of the "Jurassic World" films, yet they each made over $1 billion.

Now, the girlies are getting their very own legacy sequel with "The Devil Wears Prada 2," a movie that picks up 20 years after Miranda Priestly memorably schooled Andy Sachs (and us) on cerulean belts and florals for spring — and it was surprisingly great.

Here are some of the best and worst legacy sequels in recent history.

Watching "The Devil Wears Prada 2" felt like coming home — if home was a toxic workplace we just can't seem to get enough of.
Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly in "The Devil Wears Prada 2."

"The Devil Wears Prada" is one of the most quotable movies of the last 20 years and has become a cultural touchstone since its 2006 release. It earned Meryl Streep her 14th Oscar nomination, cemented Anne Hathaway as a movie star, and introduced us to the icon that is Emily Blunt. Need we say more?

So when news of a sequel that would pick up 20 years after Andy left Runway and Miranda Priestly behind, fans were understandably nervous. However, those fears are unfounded.

A worse movie would make endless references to the original, pretend that the media landscape is the same as it was in 2006, and reduce Miranda to a quip machine.

Instead, this movie tackles the issues that are facing journalism in 2026 head-on, with sometimes depressing accuracy. Besides a few subtle references at the beginning, the film also shows restraint in deploying what some reviewers have termed "key-jangling" — showing the audience little references and Easter eggs to the first film as if to say, "Look, remember this thing? You loved it in 2006, and you still love it now!"

All in all, "The Devil Wears Prada 2" is the best-case scenario for a film like this.

There's an argument to be made that "28 Years Later" is just as good as "28 Days Later."
"28 Years Later."

Upon its release in 2002, "28 Days Later" changed the zombie genre forever — even though, yes, we know, they aren't technically the living dead — with the introduction of running zombies. It was also a brutally entertaining thriller, with a talented cast, solid jump scares, and a somewhat hopeful ending.

"28 Years Later" (the less we say about "28 Weeks Later," the better) cancels out the hopeful ending of the first film, but for some reason, we don't mind. Instead, it's a bleak and mournful tale of a young boy, Spike (Alfie Williams), learning that his dad, Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), isn't as heroic as he thought, and that the Rage Virus isn't the only thing that can kill you.

Its sequel, "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple," continues the story of Spike. We don't want to spoil anything, since this movie only came out a few months ago, but we'll say that the Ralph Fiennes Oscar campaign starts anew for his bittersweet performance as a former doctor just doing his best.

While there aren't any returning characters from the first two films, fear not: Cillian Murphy's Jim returned briefly as a tease for a coming third film in this sequel series.

"Twisters" is just as fun as the original.
Kate (Daisy Edgar-Jones) and Tyler (Glen Powell) in "Twisters."

"Twister," released in 1996, is the definition of a theme park ride in movie form. The stunts and practical effects are mind-blowing, as were the visual effects for the time. Remember when the cow flew across the street in front of a bewildered Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt?

Somehow, it took 28 years to bring storm-chasers back to the big screen, this time played by Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell in 2024's "Twisters." Once again, it's best to sit back, relax, and watch the tornadoes blast across your screen.

None of the original characters from "Twister" appear in "Twisters," though James Paxton, the son of Bill Paxton, makes a cameo to pay tribute to his late father, who died in 2017.

2022's "Top Gun: Maverick" was much better than it had any right to be.
Tom Cruise in "Top Gun: Maverick."

The first "Top Gun," released in 1986, was a hyper-masculine fairy tale about US Navy pilot Pete "Maverick" Mitchell (Tom Cruise) getting sent to Top Gun (the flight school for the best of the best) while learning lessons, making friends, finding love, experiencing loss, and playing a lot of beach volleyball in jeans.

"Top Gun: Maverick," released a whopping 36 years later — after many COVID-related delays — somehow improves upon every aspect of the original. The action is indelible, the new characters are exceedingly charming (we see you, Miles Teller, Glen Powell, and Lewis Pullman), the love story is better (thank you, Jennifer Connelly), and Maverick is somehow the same old Maverick some 30-odd years later, taking risks up in the sky where he belongs.

"Maverick" was not only the second-biggest movie of 2022, but it also overtook "Titanic" as Paramount's highest-grossing domestic film, has a staggering 96% on Rotten Tomatoes, and is now the highest-grossing film of Cruise's storied career. It's the gold standard of all legacy sequels from now until the end of time.

We hope that the recently confirmed "Top Gun 3" can live up to the standard set by this film.

When "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" brought back Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher for the first time in 32 years, '70s and '80s kids were overjoyed.
"Star Wars: The Force Awakens."

The saga of Luke Skywalker, his twin sister Princess Leia Organa, their corrupted father, Darth Vader, and their dashing, roguish friend Han Solo ended in 1983 with "Return of the Jedi." Or so we thought.

But 32 years later, in 2015, Ford and Fisher came back to a galaxy far, far away in "The Force Awakens" (Mark Hamill wouldn't appear really until "The Last Jedi" in 2017. But this time, they brought new friends in the form of Rey (Daisy Ridley), Finn (John Boyega), and Poe (Oscar Isaac).

Whatever your thoughts are on how the rest of the trilogy played out, "The Force Awakens" is a delightful space romp, very respectful of the original '70s and '80s trilogy while also adding new characters, planets, and lore for new fans to sink their teeth into, as well as the old.

The fifth installment of the "Scream" franchise, simply titled "Scream," successfully made us care about new characters while also paying homage to the OGs.
"Scream."

The first "Scream" was released in 1996, and three more films followed in 1997, 2000, and 2011, before the franchise took another decadelong break. Eleven years after Sidney and the gang took down yet another Ghostface Killer in the town of Woodsboro, California, the fifth installment dropped in 2022.

"Scream" introduced us to a whole new generation of horror movie fanatics/residents of the world's most cursed town. However, this installment also brought back our faves like Sidney (Neve Campbell), Gale (Courteney Cox), Dewey (David Arquette), Judy (Marley Shelton), and even the first-ever Ghostface, Billy Loomis (a de-aged Skeet Ulrich), to bring down the latest masked serial killer.

"Scream" was successful enough that a sixth installment was released in 2023 (without Campbell), and a seventh one — with Campbell returning — was released in 2026 and became the franchise's highest-grossing film.

Another horror franchise that got a legacy sequel bump is "Halloween," which saw the 11th installment in 2018 wipe the slate clean.

The very first "Halloween," released in 1978, is widely regarded as one of the most iconic and influential horror movies of all time, catapulting director John Carpenter and star Jamie Lee Curtis into the horror hall of fame. The same cannot be said for the nine ensuing sequels.

Perhaps that's why, after 40 years, the 2018 film wiped out all of the sequel films from its continuity and picks up with a traumatized Laurie Strode (Curtis), still at the ready in case her arch-nemesis Michael Myers returns to the town of Haddonfield.

It became the highest-grossing slasher film upon its release, breaking a 22-year-old record set by "Scream," and spawned two more sequels: 2021's "Halloween Kills" and 2022's "Halloween Ends."

Even though neither of those sequels was good, we can't let it cancel out the success of the 2018 installment.

"The Matrix Resurrections" was polarizing when it was released in 2021, but we enjoyed seeing Neo and Trinity together.
"The Matrix Resurrections."

When the first movie in your series was as genre-defining and iconic as the original "Matrix," it's always going to be hard to live up to expectations. And after the 2003 double-whammy of "The Matrix Reloaded" and "The Matrix Revolutions," many thought the story of Neo (Keanu Reeves), a messianic figure who brought about the end of a war between humans and machines, was over.

But 18 years later, Lana Wachowski (one-half of the duo behind the original trilogy) returned to the Matrix to explain what happened after Neo saved the world: The machines captured him and his dead girlfriend Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) and stuck them both in their newest version of the Matrix, a simulation of the real world.

The movie was polarizing, to say the least, but after Trinity's fate in "Revolutions," it was cathartic to see the two of them reunited and to see old faces like Jada Pinkett Smith's Niobe, along with new characters like Neil Patrick Harris' Analyst.

"Creed" combined the powers of director Ryan Coogler and star Michael B. Jordan with our nostalgia for everyone's favorite boxer, Rocky Balboa, played by Sylvester Stallone.
"Creed."

The final "Rocky" film was released in 2006 and was titled "Rocky Balboa." Arguably, that might also be a legacy sequel since it came out 30 years after the 1976 original, but it definitely wouldn't make our best list.

"Creed," however, proved that just because Rocky wasn't slugging it out in the ring anymore didn't mean audiences wouldn't be interested in the Philadelphia boxing scene. Instead, "Creed" shifted the action to Adonis "Donnie" Creed, the son of Rocky's friend Apollo, who died in a boxing match during the events of "Rocky IV."

The film followed him as he struggled to build a legacy for himself without his father's name, bonded with Rocky, and fell in love with Bianca (Tessa Thompson).

Both a box-office and critical success, with Stallone even getting nominated for an Academy Award, "Creed" has become a franchise in and of itself. "Creed II" was released in 2018, and "Creed III" was released in 2023.

"Spider-Man: No Way Home" technically served as a legacy sequel for both 2007's "Spider-Man 3" and 2014's "The Amazing Spider-Man 2."
Andrew Garfield in "Spider-Man: No Way Home."

The original trilogy of Spider-Man films concluded in 2007, with Tobey Maguire's version of the web-slinger burying his best friend, Harry, and potentially reconnecting with his love, Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst). There was supposed to be a fourth movie, but it never materialized, leaving fans of that trilogy with little closure.

Instead, Sony rebooted Spidey in 2012 with a new guy at the lead, Andrew Garfield. The responses to his movies were middling at best, and his saga ended after "Amazing Spider-Man 2," which left his version of Peter in a dark place, mourning the death of his girlfriend, Gwen Stacy. Fans of that would-be trilogy didn't get any closure either.

That is, until the Tom Holland version of Spider-Man got himself in a little multiversal trouble and accidentally brought the two past versions of Spider-Man into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, along with some of their most famous villains in "Spider-Man: No Way Home," aka the highest-grossing film of 2021.

Seeing all three of them interact on-screen would've been worth it, but we also got to see Maguire reconcile with two of his villains, and, most importantly, we saw Garfield's Peter Parker save MJ (Zendaya) from falling, redeeming his mistake from eight years prior.

Fans returned to the Overlook Hotel after 39 years in the 2019 sequel to "The Shining," with "Doctor Sleep."
Mike Flanagan directed "Doctor Sleep."

"The Shining," the beloved Stanley Kubrick adaptation of the Stephen King novel, ended with young Danny Torrance escaping from the Overlook with his mother (Shelley Duvall), as his father Jack (Jack Nicholson) slowly froze to death and then had his spirit get absorbed into the hotel.

"Doctor Sleep" picks up decades later with an adult Danny, now played by Ewan McGregor, who must return to the Overlook to help save a little girl who has the same psychic powers as he does.

It was satisfying to see Danny confront his demons head-on, including peeking his head through the same door his father smashed with an axe, and even conversing with the spirit of his father (now played by Henry Thomas, who has an eerily accurate Nicholson impression).

We shouldn't have been surprised that "Top Gun: Maverick" was good — director Joseph Kosinski's directorial debut, "Tron: Legacy," was also a solid legacy sequel.
"Tron: Legacy."

"Tron: Legacy" was released in 2010, 31 years after the original "Tron" was released in 1982. The original stars Jeff Bridges as Flynn, a video game developer who gets sucked into the mainframe of a computer and must battle his way out with the help of two computer programs, Ram and Tron. Flynn is trapped inside the game as part of his attempts to reveal that his coworker has been taking credit for his work.

In "Tron: Legacy," Flynn has been missing since 1989, and his son Sam (Garrett Hedlund) is determined to find him and is subsequently sucked into the grid, reuniting with his father.

While "Legacy" didn't get the best reviews, its stunning visuals are what earn its place on this "best" side of this list. Director Kosinski established his talent with this movie, and we might not have "Maverick" without it.

Unfortunately, we can't say the same positive things about "Tron: Ares."

"The Color of Money" is arguably the first legacy sequel ever, released in 1986.
"The Color of Money."

"The Color of Money," starring Tom Cruise and Paul Newman, is actually a sequel to the 1961 film "The Hustler," in which Newman played pool hustler Eddie Felson.

Twenty-five years later, Eddie has moved on from pool hustling and is now a liquor salesman. But that doesn't stop him from noticing the new kid on the block, Vincent Lauria's (Cruise) talent for hustling, and he decides to mentor him.

"The Color of Money" set the stage for Cruise to become one of the biggest movie stars of his generation, while also serving as a lovely late-stage role for Newman. The film finally won him his Oscar after a decadeslong career in Hollywood.

"Blade Runner 2049" is another beautifully shot (but polarizing) legacy sequel.

In fact, its polarizing nature makes it just like its 1982 predecessor, which confounded critics and didn't make that much money. But the Harrison Ford-led sci-fi epic found its audiences after many years and many re-cuts of the movie — so much so that director Denis Villeneuve got his crack at the world of replicants 35 years later with "Blade Runner 2049."

"Blade Runner" and its sequel take place in a future where synthetic humans, called replicants, have been created to work in space colonies — but when a group of fugitive replicants escape to Earth, blade runner Rick Deckard (Ford), is tasked with tracking them down. He finds out, though, that replicants aren't exactly what he's been led to believe.

"Blade Runner 2049" picks up 30 years later, focusing on a replicant named K (Ryan Gosling) who is a blade runner himself, and is tasked to find a human-replicant baby and "retire" it, in case the public finds out that replicants can reproduce like humans can. It's revealed that the baby's father is, in fact, Deckard, who has been in hiding for years.

"2049" ended up being as polarizing, thought-provoking, and beautifully shot as the original.

Now, time for some of the worst legacy sequels. First up, "Jurassic World" and its two follow-ups.

To be fair, this isn't totally "Jurassic World's" fault. "Jurassic Park," upon its release in 1993, completely changed the game for special effects and was a rip-roaring good time, but even its two immediate sequels, released in 1997 and 2001, had diminishing returns.

That's probably why they should've left well enough alone — instead, we got 2015's "Jurassic World," which essentially re-told the story of "Jurassic Park" but added in new (forgettable) characters played by Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard, and a fateful pair of high heels.

Its two sequels, "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom" and "Jurassic World Dominion," released in 2018 and 2022, brought back beloved characters from the original film, but even that just felt like fan service instead of closure.

Even though these movies made billions of dollars, "Dominion's" franchise low on Rotten Tomatoes shows that it's probably time to move on — even if another reboot ("Jurassic World Rebirth") hit theaters last summer and made another $870 million.

Harrison Ford has participated in three legacy sequels; not all of them could be great. "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" is his miss.

Indiana Jones (part-time archaeologist, part-time treasure hunter), as played by Ford, made his debut back in 1981 with "Raiders of the Lost Ark," and returned for two more sequels, 1984's "Temple of Doom" and 1989's "Last Crusade." Many thought that was the end for Indy, his hat, and his trusty whip.

Except ... it wasn't. Nineteen years after "Last Crusade," Ford suited up once again for "Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," which reunited Indy with his love from the first film, Marion (Karen Allen), and their son Mutt (Shia LaBeouf).

As David Denby of The New Yorker put it, "the unprecedented blend of comedy and action that made the movies so much more fun than any other adventure series is mostly gone."

That's probably why they gave it one more try in 2023 for a fifth "Indiana Jones" installment, once again starring Ford: "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny" (which was, once again, not very good).

It's time we face facts: Neither 1996's "Space Jam" nor its 2021 sequel "Space Jam: A New Legacy" are very good.

In the case of "Space Jam 2," the legacy characters are, in fact, the Looney Tunes (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Lola Bunny, Porky Pig — the list goes on). Original basketball star Michael Jordan did not return for the 2021 sequel, although Michael B. Jordan does make an admittedly cute cameo.

Instead, LeBron James steps into Jordan's cartoon shoes for this soulless Warner Bros. IP-fest, which is basically a commercial for Tune Squad merch and HBO. Not even the original film's director liked it.

"Independence Day: Resurgence" is missing one key ingredient from the original: Will Smith.
"Independence Day: Resurgence."

Instead, "Resurgence" casts Jessie T. Usher to play Smith's character's stepson, Dylan, while substituting Liam Hemsworth as the film's actual leading man.

"Resurgence" was released in 2016, 20 years after the release of "Independence Day," and brings back Jeff Goldblum and Bill Pullman as scientist David Levinson and former president Thomas Whitmore, respectively — and they're the best things about this forgettable sequel about another alien invasion attacking the Earth.

Don't just take our word for it: Trust the 28% critics' score and 30% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.

"Zoolander 2" is the definition of a long-awaited sequel we really didn't need.
Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson in "Zoolander 2."

Was anyone really clamoring for a sequel to the 2001 supermodel comedy "Zoolander"? No? Well, we got one anyway 15 years later with "Zoolander 2," bringing back Ben Stiller's himbo icon Derek Zoolander, his frenemy Hansel (Owen Wilson), his arch-nemesis Mugatu (Will Ferrell), and the ghost of his wife Matilda (Christine Taylor).

The sequel also throws Zoolander's estranged son into the mix, played by Cyrus Arnold, as well as a slew of other characters, cameos, and a truly troubling performance by Benedict Cumberbatch.

Plus, it barely broke even at the box office, according to Box Office Mojo.

If "The Force Awakens" is a good example of a legacy sequel, "Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker" is the epitome of a bad one.
"Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker"

In retrospect, it would've been impossible to craft a solid ending to this new trilogy after the polarized reaction to "The Last Jedi" — either "Rise of Skywalker" could respect the events of its predecessor, angering a very vocal group of fans, or it would ignore the events of "Last Jedi" completely, angering the other half of fans.

And in the end, Lucasfilm went with the latter, ignoring the events of "The Last Jedi," but somehow also failing to live up to any fans' expectations. From the non-explanation of Palpatine returning after getting defeated 36 years prior, to the fake-out death of Chewbacca, to the total sidelining of Rose and Finn, "Rise of Skywalker" finally united "Star Wars" fans in hatred.

Just watch "Andor" instead.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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