Seriously, I Could Have Lived Without These 10 Unnecessary Sci-Fi Movie Sequels

Science fiction movies never quite seem to be safe from unnecessary sequels, with some franchises being revived even decades later to disastrous results. It’s the nature of Hollywood to yearn for sequels, especially where expensive blockbusters, like science fiction movies tend to be, are concerned. This has resulted in a great number of brilliant sci-fi films receiving totally unnecessary and critically inept sequels that attempt to cash in on an already completed story.

Franchises like the Star Wars series or James Cameron’s burgeoning Avatar films have proven time and time again that science fiction is perfect for carrying tentpole blockbuster films across the finish line. However, not every science fiction story leaves enough room in their premise for sequels to mine for additional narrative. As a result, many science fiction sequels can feel totally unnecessary or even disrespectful to their predecessors.

10

The Matrix Resurrections

A Film Made Out Of Spite

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The Matrix Resurrections

r

Action

Sci-Fi

21

6.6/10

Release Date

December 22, 2021

Runtime

148 Minutes

Director

Lana Wachowski

Writers

Lana Wachowski, David Mitchell, Aleksandar Hemon, Lilly Wachowski

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Keanu Reeves In The Los Angeles Premiere Of Lionsgate's 'John Wick: Chapter 4'

    Keanu Reeves

  • Headshot oF Carrie-Anne Moss

    Carrie-Anne Moss

Set sixty years after The Matrix Revolutions, The Matrix Resurrections is a sci-fi action movie that sees the return of Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne moss nearly twenty years after the release of the previous film. Neo has become a game developer who struggles to grasp reality, and his concerns are validated when a new visage of Morpheus arrives to free him from his prison – a newly created Matrix. Learning that Trinity is alive and being held prisoner, Neo will join a new rebel force to save her and confront a new, dangerous foe known as the Analyst.

Main Genre

Sci-Fi

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With the last film rounding out the Matrix trilogy releasing in 2003, it seemed as though the series could rest easy as a mostly beloved franchise that admittedly had a shaky end. Yet the sudden renaissance of Keanu Reeves in Hollywood seemed to necessitate a sequel, demanded by the studios in the form of The Matrix Resurrections. After almost 20 years, Reeves returned again as Neo, who finds himself once again held captive by the system he once rebelled against.

The film seems to almost openly mock its own existence with the meta narrative of Neo’s return.

The Matrix Resurrections is so unnecessary that it almost hurts to see classic characters like Neo and Trinity return for such a mediocre installment. The film seems to almost openly mock its own existence with the meta narrative of Neo’s return, leading to some fans to theorize that Lana Wachowski made The Matrix Resurrections out of spite. Even if this isn’t true, it’s easy to see how a viewer could come to this conclusion after watching a film that adds nothing worthwhile to the established Matrix mythos.

9

Independence Day: Resurgence

20 Years Too Late

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Independence Day: Resurgence

PG-13

Adventure

Sci-Fi

Action

ScreenRant logo

4/10

5/10

Release Date

June 24, 2016

Runtime

120 minutes

Director

Roland Emmerich

Writers

Nicolas Wright, Roland Emmerich, James Vanderbilt, Dean Devlin, James A. Woods

Prequel(s)

Independence Day

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Bill Pullman

    Bill Pullman

  • Headshot Of Sela Ward

    Sela Ward

Set 20 years after the original, this sequel to Independence Day sees the nations of Earth use the alien technology to develop an advanced defense system for the planet. But nothing can prepare them for an unprecedented force of alien attackers out for revenge. It’s up to a few brave men and women to save the world from extraterrestrials once more.

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At least The Matrix already had some precedence for sequels by the time The Matrix Resurrections came out, as the same can’t be said for Independence Day: Resurgence. The original Independence Day is one of the most beloved action movies of all time, showing a plucky humanity fending off an alien invasion with superior technology. After laying dormant for two decades, the IP was revived for one last gasp with Independence Day: Resurgence.

In the sequel, a unified humanity benefitting from the aliens’ technology has to once again fight off a new invading army bent on harvesting resources from the Earth’s molten core, destroying the planet in the process. The film suffers from a tremendous lack of stakes – Whereas the aliens’ terror in the original is very much on display, the enhanced resources and expertise that the humans of Independence Day: Resurgence has makes them never feel truly in danger. Pepper in an audacious attempt at seeding more sequels, and the follow-up remains totally unworthy in the shadow of its predecessor.

8

The Predator

Unnecessary And Downright Offensive

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The Predator

R

Sci-Fi

Action

Adventure

ScreenRant logo

5/10

14

8.6/10

Release Date

September 14, 2018

Runtime

107 Minutes

Director

Shane Black

Writers

Fred Dekker, Shane Black

Franchise(s)

Predator

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Boyd Holbrook

    Boyd Holbrook

    Quinn McKenna

  • Headshot of Trevante Rhodes

    Trevante Rhodes

    Nebraska Williams

The Predator follows a group of ex-soldiers and a scientist who band together to battle a new evolution of lethal alien Predators. As these hunters descend upon Earth, the team must fight to prevent humanity’s extinction.

Main Genre

Sci-Fi

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Films like Prey have proven that the Predator franchise has more than enough fuel left in the tank as long as a simple formula in which the vicious alien killers are dropped into some novel new setting is obeyed. This will be adhered to in the upcoming Predator: Badlands, which will see the Yautja hunters attack a post-apocalyptic world, but the franchise has previously attempted more serialized storytelling.

Enter 2018’s The Predator, which tried and failed to accelerate the series’ canon into bizarre new territory.

In The Predator, a group of traumatized soldiers and a scientist have to defend humanity from the Predators’ new insidious plans. Infamously, The Predator included an autistic character whose autism is thought to be the next stage of human evolution by the Predators, enabling him to pilot their technology. Trying to turn the franchise into a cataclysmic world-threatening story it never intended to be, The Predator is destined to be forgotten as an unneeded speed bump in the series’ history.

7

Men In Black: International

Proves Not Every Great Franchise Has a Reason To Continue

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Men In Black: International

PG-13

Action

Comedy

Sci-Fi

ScreenRant logo

5/10

4.2/10

Release Date

June 14, 2019

Runtime

115 Minutes

Director

F. Gary Gray

Writers

Art Marcum, Matt Holloway

Prequel(s)

Men In Black, Men in Black II, Men in Black 3

Cast

See All

  • Chris Hemsworth Profile Picture

    Chris Hemsworth

  • Headshot Of Tessa Thompson In The V&A Summer Party 2024

    Tessa Thompson

Starring Chris Hemsworth as Agent H and Tessa Thompson as Agent M, Men In Black: International marks a new beginning for the MiB franchise after the success of the Will Smith-led trilogy. This time, the dark-suited heroes face an infiltrated threat in the organization, which could trigger a weapon of mass destruction if they don’t act fast.

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Oddly enough, Independence Day: Resurgence isn’t the only alien-themed franchise featuring Will Smith that attempted to revive years later without the benefit of Smith’s stardom. Even great franchises run out of steam sooner or later, and Men in Black: International proves that it’s better to leave well enough alone rather than try to push something that was never meant to be. The original Men in Black movies thrived on Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones (and Josh Brolin’s) chemistry as Agents J and K, with the alien set dressing being mere icing on the cake.

Tess Thompson and Chris Hemsworth, both of Thor fame, do have a good enough chemistry to almost carry Men in Black: International across the finish line. However, the tired plot threads of shapeshifting aliens appearing in human form and sterile sense of comedy leaves something wanting from the original Men in Black formula. Even if the last movie in it was a great one, not every science fiction franchise necessarily needs to return for fourths.

6

Highlander II: The Quickening

There Should Have Only Been One

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Highlander II: The Quickening

R

Action

Adventure

Fantasy

Release Date

November 1, 1991

Runtime

91 Minutes

Director

Russell Mulcahy

Writers

Peter Bellwood, William N. Panzer, Brian Clemens, Gregory Widen

Cast

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  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Christopher Lambert

    MacLeod

  • Headshot Of Sean Connery In The 35th Annual AFI Life Achievement

    Sean Connery

    Ramírez

  • Headshot Of Virginia Madsen

    Virginia Madsen

    Louise

  • Headshot Of Michael Ironside

    Michael Ironside

    Katana

Highlander II: The Quickening is a science fiction film directed by Russell Mulcahy, serving as a sequel to the 1986 Highlander. Set in a dystopian future, the film follows Connor MacLeod, played by Christopher Lambert, who must confront an ecological disaster while battling new enemies. Sean Connery reprises his role as Juan Sánchez-Villalobos Ramírez, aiding MacLeod in his quest. The narrative explores themes of immortality, power, and environmental destruction.

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One of the most infamously hated sequels of all time, Highlander II: The Quickening is one of the only science fiction films that wasn’t only an unnecessary second installment, but retroactively ruined the story of the original. In the first Highlander, the Immortals’ origins are left mysterious, with little known about them outside of the strange rules they must follow, with the infamous tagline “There can be only one” summing up their struggle for dominance. However, the sequel had its own ideas about how the mysterious beings worked.

Christopher Lambert as Connor laughing/smiling in Highlander 2 and experiencing a

Related

Highlander 2 Is One Of The Worst Movies Ever Made, But A Much Better Sequel Happened Only 1 Year Later

Highlander 2: The Quickening is one of the worst sequels ever produced – but thankfully, the franchise was redeemed the following year.

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In Highlander II: The Quickening, it’s explained that the Immortals are actually alien beings from the planet Zeist, sullying the mysticism of the previous film. Not only that, but the century-spanning plotline is hard to keep up with, leaving the finished product more unwieldy than a Scottish claymore. In the end, the Highlander franchise should have abided by its famous quote.

5

Deep Blue Sea 2

Couldn’t Expand on an Already Shallow Original

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Deep Blue Sea 2

R

Sci-Fi

Horror

Action

Release Date

April 17, 2018

Runtime

94 Minutes

Director

Darin Scott

Writers

Duncan Kennedy, Donna Powers, Wayne Powers

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Danielle Savre

    Danielle Savre

    Misty Calhoun

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Rob Mayes

    Trent Slater

  • Headshot Of Michael Beach

    Michael Beach

    Carl Durant

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Nathan Lynn

    Aaron Ellroy

Deep Blue Sea 2 follows billionaire pharmaceutical mogul Carl Durant, who experiments on genetically modified bull sharks in a remote underwater facility. As these intelligent predators start exhibiting deadly behavior, the scientists must band together to survive. Directed by Darin Scott and starring Danielle Savre and Michael Beach, this sequel explores the consequences of tampering with nature’s design.

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More or less a sophisticated clone of Jaws itself, Deep Blue Sea already isn’t the most capable science fiction movie when it comes to an expansion for a sequel. The premise of an underwater research facility coming under attack by hyper-intelligent sharks was more or less explored to completion. But that didn’t stop a Deep Blue Sea 2 from getting made, somehow even more shallow than the original.

Deep Blue Sea 2 more or less tells the exact same story over again, with the idea of genetically altering sharks to have human levels of intelligence not getting any better the second time around. Boasting a rare 0% freshness rating on RottenTomatoes.com, it’s clear that the film is simply a worse version of the original, without the benefit of strong actors like Samuel L. Jackson to carry the absurdity across the finish line. It’s hard to find a science fiction sequel no one asked for as much as Deep Blue Sea 2.

4

Terminator Salvation

Bad Enough to Deserve Sully The Timeline

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Terminator Salvation

PG-13

Action

Thriller

Sci-Fi

ScreenRant logo

6/10

6/10

Release Date

May 20, 2009

Runtime

115 minutes

Director

McG

Writers

John Brancato, Michael Ferris

Producers

Andrew G. Vajna, Jeffrey Silver, Joel B. Michaels, Mario Kassar, Moritz Borman, Peter D. Graves, Dan Lin, Jeanne Allgood, Victor Kubicek

Cast

See All

  • Headshot Of Christian Bale In The `The Pale Blue Eye` LA Premiere

    Christian Bale

    John Connor

  • Headshot Of Sam Worthington In the Los Angeles premiere of 'Horizon: An American Saga - Chapter 1'

    Sam Worthington

    Marcus Wright

Terminator Salvation is set in post-apocalyptic 2018, where John Connor leads the human resistance against powerful machines. The arrival of Marcus Wright introduces uncertainty, as Connor seeks to uncover Wright’s origins—be it future or past—and establish if he is an ally or enemy.

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The Terminator films peaked long ago with Terminator 2: Judgment Day, one of the best action movies of all time. While Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines was a dramatic step down in quality, it still had its moments, though the effort made it clear that it was time for the franchise to hang up the leather jacket and shades once and for all. Sadly, the series had to continue shuffling onwards with Terminator Salvation, the first (and arguably, worst) of many unnecessary sequels.

The action is as mechanical and by-the-numbers as ever, with a tone shifting startlingly towards the establishment, marring the ideological impact of the entire franchise.

The only Terminator film to-date not to feature Arnold Schwarzenegger in some capacity as a T-800, Terminator Salvation has a total void of charisma not filled by Christian Bale’s angry performance as John Connor. The action is as mechanical and by-the-numbers as ever, with a tone shifting startlingly towards the establishment, marring the ideological impact of the entire franchise. It’s no wonder that Terminator Genisys opted to start a new timeline allogether, ignoring the events of the disastrous fourth installment.

3

S. Darko

Unheard of For a Good Reason

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S. Darko

R

Thriller

Crime

Science Fiction

Mystery

Release Date

April 28, 2009

Runtime

103 minutes

Director

Chris Fisher

Writers

Nate Atkins

Producers

Adam Fields

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Daveigh Chase

    Daveigh Chase

    Samantha Darko

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Elizabeth Berkley

    Trudy Potter

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Briana Evigan

    Corey

  • Headshot Of James Lafferty

    James Lafferty

    Iraq Jack

S. Darko is a sequel to the cult film Donnie Darko, following Samantha Darko as she becomes stranded in a desert town. Haunted by strange visions foretelling the end of the world, she confronts personal challenges while attempting to alter the course of events to save both the universe and herself.

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Donnie Darko is a perfectly self-contained, if confusing, story about time travel as told through the lens of teenage isolation and angst. For all its fame, most are unaware that Donnie Darko has a sequel at all, made without any involvement from the original’s director and writer Richard Kelly. S. Darko is named after Donnie’s sister, Samantha, who goes on to have a bizarre time-hopping journey of her own years later after the mysterious death of her brother unfolds.

S. Darko has just as confusing and ambitious of a script as the original without the same masterful control of narrative that narrowly allows it to work. The superficial dialogue and one-dimensional characters also can’t do justice to Donnie Darko, setting S. Darko even further apart from its famous progenitor. Though time may loop in the setting, it’s clear that the world of Donnie Darko only ever needed to be visited once.

2

Starship Troopers 2: Hero Of The Federation

Glosses The Point of The Original

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Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation

R

Action

Adventure

Horror

Sci-Fi

Release Date

April 20, 2004

Runtime

88 minutes

Director

Phil Tippett

Writers

Edward Neumeier

Cast

  • Headshot Of Billy Brown

    Billy Brown

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Richard Burgi

  • Headshot Of Kelly Carlson

    Kelly Carlson

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Cy Carter

Main Genre

Action

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Like most of Paul Verhoeven’s work, Starship Troopers is a revolutionary science fiction film that re-defines what a space opera can be as a story, subverting the message of the original book into scathing anti-fascist satire. As potent as the message may be, at the end of the day, the spectacle of the war on bugs and futuristic aesthetic is more than enough to inspire an unnecessary franchise. Thus was Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation, taking the I.P. on its first steps towards becoming basic sci-fi action noise.

Much of the runtime of Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation is spent introducing cool new additions to the series’ lore such as laser weapons and psychic soldiers from a boots-on-the-ground perspective. This action-forward mode of storytelling only leaves a small denouement available for the series’ political messaging, hammering home a point with far less subtlety and nuance than the original was able to accomplish. Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation paved the way for many more unwarranted expansions of the original universe.

1

The Cloverfield Paradox

A Puzzling Attempt to Bring Together a Disjointed Franchise

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The Cloverfield Paradox

PG-13

Mystery

Horror

Sci-Fi

ScreenRant logo

5/10

6/10

Release Date

February 4, 2018

Runtime

102 Minutes

Director

Julius Onah

Writers

Doug Jung, Oren Uziel

Prequel(s)

Cloverfield, 10 Cloverfield Lane

Cast

See All

  • Headshot OF John Ortiz

    John Ortiz

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Roger Davies

The Cloverfield Paradox is the third installment in J.J. Abrams’ Cloverfield franchise. In it, a team of scientists aboard the Cloverfield space station accidentally jump into an alternate dimension while attempting to harness a new form of energy that could solve Earth’s energy crisis. The movie was initially conceived as an original idea, but was later modified to connect with the previous two films.

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The Cloverfield franchise is an odd one, to say the least. The original Cloverfield works well enough on its own as a found-footage giant monster movie, and 10 Cloverfield Lane was a pleasant surprise as a tangentially-related follow-up vaguely in the same series. After that, however, The Cloverfield Paradox tried and failed to unite the series together with a firmer identity via a bizarre science fiction movie taking place in space.

In The Cloverfied Paradox, scientists onboard a space station begin to encounter strange phenomena that seems to suggest the presence of an alternate reality merging into their own. The fact that The Cloverfield Paradox was initially an unrelated script that was only retroactively fitted to relate to the original Cloverfield is quite obvious, resulting in a disjointed feeling that the series never needed to continue past the first film at all. The Cloverfield Paradox‘s own confusing science fiction story doesn’t help matters, not making the argument for why the franchise should have ever developed.

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