Life isn’t fair. I think we can all agree with that. But sometimes at least it makes sense. For example, there have been eight (or arguably nine ) films in the Fast and Furious series, but there has only been one Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever . Not too many people are complaining about that. It is 100% logical.
But sometimes the film industry doesn’t work that way, and films that were respectable hits or were adaptations of popular characters or eventually became cult classics don’t get any sequels at all. Everyone knows about Commando . It’s one of the most beloved action movies of the 1980s. It helped make Arnold Schwarzenegger an international superstar. It was an enormous hit. And it didn’t lead to any sequels whatsoever, even though this month we’re getting the fourth sequel to The Marine , a completely forgettable box office mediocrity that starred John Cena.
Yeah, life isn’t fair. But we can dream. Let’s take a look at 13 action movies that, in a perfect world, would have led to some sequels. Some of them are undisputed classics, some of them are cult flicks, and some of them were ahead of their time. All of them deserved better.
13 Action Movies That Deserved to Have Sequels
Top Photo: 20th Century Fox
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and Canceled Too Soon , and watch him on the weekly YouTube series What the Flick . Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani .
13 Action Movies That Should Have Had Sequels
Battleship (2012)
Peter Berg's big, dumb, entertaining adaptation of the board game Battleship is just as entertaining (if not more so) than any Transformers movie. But for some reason it was dead in the water.
Photo: Universal Pictures
Big Trouble in Little China (1986)
John Carpenter's subversive and hilarious action comedy starred Kurt Russell as a trucker who thinks he's an action hero, but winds up sidelined in the centuries-old fight between good and evil. Maybe it was too clever for its own good, but the adventures of Jack Burton could have easily continued into more kooky cult classics.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
Chronicle (2012)
This surprisingly rich and engaging found footage superhero film started off as a lark and evolved into the American equivalent of Akira , setting the stage for more exciting stories to come. Plans were made for a follow-up, but they seem to have fallen through, leaving Chronicle fans hanging after only the first chapter.
Photo: 2oth Century Fox
Commando (1985)
The Arnold Schwarzenegger action thriller Commando is one of the most iconic films of the 1980s, an over the top explosion of absurd machismo that still boasts legions of fans today. There's no reason why it had to be done-in-one. All you had to do was piss John Matrix off and set him loose and you've got cinematic gold.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
District 9 (2009)
Neill Blomkamp's sci-fi thriller District 9 earned an Oscar nomination for Best Picture. That's how good this innovative parable for apartheid - and xenophobia in all its forms - is. The film ends on a bit of a cliffhanger and Blomkamp claims to want to produce a follow-up someday but he hasn't provided any concrete updates in years, and the project seems - for now - to be a non-starter.
Photo: TriStar Pictures
Dredd (2012)
Forget the Sylvester Stallone movie. Pete Travis's adaptation of the Judge Dredd comic books is a hard-edged, exciting, impressive action movie that was supposed to lead to a multi-film franchise. Dredd has a cult now but theatrical audiences didn't notice it the first time around, and it seems as though a sequel - which everyone involved says they'd be up for - is a pipe dream at best.
Photo: Lionsgate
Foxy Brown (1974)
Foxy Brown is one of the most famous action heroes in motion picture history. People know her name whether or not they've actually seen her movie. But for whatever reason this Pam Grier classic never led to any sequels, even though many of Foxy Brown 's contemporaries - like Shaft and Cleopatra Jones - earned their own follow-ups.
Photo: American International Pictures
Mr. and Mrs. Smith (2005)
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are hired assassins who, secretly, are married to each other in Mr. and Mrs. Smith , an exciting, funny, sexy action-comedy that became a box office hit but never turned into a franchise. Which is weird, if you think about it, since the original film never actually resolves the plot of who was trying to kill them, and you'd think they would want to get to that eventually in future films. Plans were made for a follow-up, and a TV series almost came together, but so far nothing (and after Jolie and Pitt's divorce, it seems more unlikely than ever).
Photo: 20th Century Fox
Point Break (1991)
The original story of a hunky FBI agents who falls in with a gang of extreme sports thieves remains one of the biggest cult classics of the 1990s. But even though The Fast and the Furious took the exact same concept and transformed itself in a multibillion dollar franchise, the original film was a done-in-one endeavor. We never saw Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze team up again.
Photo: 20th Century Fox
Salt (2010)
Angelina Jolie's best action movie is Salt , an unpredictable spy thriller about an American agent accused of being a Russian spy. The film's incredible action and surprising twists led to lots of sequel buzz but it's been over five years since we've heard any news about it whatsoever. Sigh...
Photo: Columbia Pictures
Serenity (2005)
Joss Whedon's cult classic tv series Firefly was canceled before it could even finish its first season, but the fans demanded more so eventually we got Serenity , a feature film that answered many of the series' lingering questions and set the stage for future adventures. Unfortunately Serenity failed to attract casual audiences who weren't familiar with the show, but it's been over a decade and the fanbase hasn't forgotten this franchise, and they're still clamoring for more. Maybe someday they'll produce a follow-up to this series... but probably not.
Photo: Universal Pictures
The Shadow (1994)
Alec Baldwin was a dapper superhero in The Shadow , a slick, amusing, inventive adaptation of the classic pulp hero that made its money back in the mid-1990s but was hardly the next Batman . It's a shame because The Shadow holds up rather well, and the character had an important role to play in the history of superhero movies. The film deserved better. It deserved at least a sequel.
Photo: Universal Pictures
Torque (2004)
Joseph Khan's Fast and Furious knockoff was accused, at the time, of being over the top and ridiculous, but ironically those were the same qualities that eventually made the Fast and Furious films into megahits. Torque beat the Fast movies to the finish line but it lost anyway, and that's a shame, because this is a dynamite motorcycle chase movie with fun characters and absurd action. It's at least as good as most of the Fast and Furious movies. It's a pity that Torque never took off.
Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures