Honestly, I'll tell you that the original is better than the sequel, but its okay if you ask me.
I know people who love the original more, but I also know people who hold the sequel more dearly (some having it as their favorite movie of all time).
He may not have been asked. In those days it was standard for a sequel to cost less money than the original movie, because it was projected that the sequel would bring in less money than the original movie. Rather than have Langan reprise the role and pay him his usual salary again, AIP could simply write the script so that the Amazing Colossal Man survived the first movie, although his face was disfigured and unrecognizable.
The option that is not an example of an interpretation is "A video game comes out with a sequel." A sequel is a continuation or expansion of the original work rather than an interpretation, which typically involves reimagining or transforming existing material into a different medium or form. The other options—adapting a novel into a movie, turning a movie into a comic book, and reinterpreting a song—are all examples of interpretations.
It has been stated that if the sequel ever does get made- it will more than likely not be like the original second movie because the remake for the first film was already set in the mentor's native homeland. So it will probably try to be more of an original idea.
No because they discovered the original was a copy of the original.
Go see the remake if you like coehn bros. but the original film with John Wayne and Robert Duvall is way better than the remake or book
Tim Burton said that it wasn't a sequel to Disney's Alice in Wonderland, and that it's more like a sequel to the books. However, the plot actually marries up better to the Disney film than it does to the books. Like the Disney film, Tim Burton's version also combines the Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen into one character, for example. But you don't need to have seen Disney's film or read the original books in order to understand the 2010 Alice in Wonderland.
The ending of the book is bittersweet. It ends differently than the movie does (and, in my opinion, has a better ending than the movie). Allie does remember Noah in the end and he does spend the night with her, as he does in the movie, but Noah does not die. The book has a bit of an ambiguous ending. The Wedding, which is the sequel to The Notebook, reveals that Noah is still alive and that Allie has passed away.
no
I was pleasantly surprised. No one can ever be a better Freddy than Robert Englund in my book, but the new actor playing Freddy did an excellent job! He got his laugh down perfectly. And they delved more into Freddy's background, his original storyline before it was slightly re-written for the original first movie.
Gump and Co is the sequel for Forrest Gump. It was written as a response to the film, rather than as a companion to his original novel. It picks up after the movie ends, and follows Forrest through the 1980's and 1990's.