The characters are quite likely protected by copyrights and also as intellectual property, so, yes.
Terminator Salvation is a sequel. It is the fourth movie (#4) in the Terminator series with the continuing story of John Connor. But in any science fiction movie having time travel, the concept of prequel or sequel gets blurred.
Yes! Bluestar's prophecy is a book in the Warriors series and is a prequel to Into the Wild.
The Hunger Games series was wildly successful, and although Mockingjay HAS been stated as the final book, I'm assuming that Suzanne Collins won't let the fire die out just yet, so maybe we can get a prequel explaining what happened and how the districts were formed, or an entire sequel series?
"Angels & Demons" is considered a prequel to "The Da Vinci Code." Both are part of the Robert Langdon series by author Dan Brown, with "Angels & Demons" being the first book in the series that introduces the character of Robert Langdon.
If you mean the movie is part of the prequel trilogy, yes. And the movie is the pilot for the TV series.
no but i hope she will come out with one soon
"Angels & Demons" was the first novel in Dan Brown's Robert Langdon series, published in 2000, while "The Da Vinci Code" was the second novel in the series, published in 2003.
No, Bungie is no longer working on halo games from what I believe, and by the way Halo reach is a prequel, not its own series, therefore it already has a sequel, Combat Evolved, the first Halo game, which is being remade by Bungie :)
A series typically refers to a set of related works that follow a particular theme or storyline. A saga, on the other hand, typically involves a longer, more epic narrative that spans multiple generations or includes various interconnected storylines. Sagas often have a more sweeping scope and are more complex than a typical series.
Next in a series.
There are no current plans for a tenth book in the "Bone" series by Jeff Smith. The series concluded with nine books and a prequel titled "Bone: Tall Tales."
"Fire" is a companion book to the "Graceling" series by Kristin Cashore. It is set in the same world as "Graceling," but focuses on different characters and events. While it can be read as a standalone, it complements the original series by providing additional depth and context to the world of the Seven Kingdoms.