Super-Franchise MeLists that rank the best and worst film series, sequels, prequels, threequels, and other ways movie studios chew up and regurgitate good ideas to squeeze out every last dignity-free penny.
Sequels That Were Worth the Wait
Best Superhero Movie Sequels
Best Third Films in a Series
Movie Sequels We'd Love to See
The Greatest Franchises That Were Books First
Horror Sequels Way Better Than You Heard
Criminally Underrated Remakes
Most Underrated Sequels of the 2010s, Ranked
The Best Remakes Ever Remade
Movies That Totally Need Sequels
Best Sequels to Comedy Movies
Sequels That Started Only Moments Later
When Actors Refused to Do the Sequel
The Exact Moment They Jumped The Shark
These Franchises Have Very Deep Mythologies
Low-Budget Films That Began Huge Franchises
Movies That Ended Entire Franchise
Trilogies We'll Never Get to See
Sorta Sly Actor Replacements
Same Old Story Except One Huge Detail
Terrible Franchise Decisions
The Best Sequels Ever Made
Disappointing Sequels That Made too much Money
Remakes That Missed the Point
Justice to the Rebooted Characters
Say Goodbye to Beloved Relationships
The Best Sequel Came Way After the Original
Greatest Fourth Films in Series
Controversial Franchise Entries
Characters Done Dirty in Sequels
Sequels That Got Rid of Main Characters
Nobody Asked for These Reboots
Sequels That Missed Their Window
The Worst Remakes Ever Made
Concessions Made for the Stars
The Worst Part II Sequels Ever
Franchises That Did A Do-Over
Sequels to '80s Movies Coming Any Day Now
When Sequels Changed Major Characters
Franchises with Only One Great Movie
Franchises That Should Have Stopped at One
Perfect Endings Totally Undone in the Sequel
The Funniest Comedy Franchises
The Greatest Movie Franchises, Ranked
Movies That Need to Be Remake
Greatest Action Film Franchises
When Horror Franchises Lost Their Grooves
The Worst Films in Great Franchises
The Best Horror Movie Franchises
The Worst Sequels of All Time
Best Animated Film Franchises
Actors Who Left and Returned to Franchises
The Greatest Comedy Remakes
Series That Need Pre-Credit Scrolls
'Empire Strikes Back' Ripoffs
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Movie Sequels That You Never Realized Were Just Copying 'Empire Strikes Back'
Vote up the sequels that borrow a little too much from 'Empire Strikes Back.'
Star Wars paved the way for all future trilogies, and the second entry being its strongest outing means there's no shortage of sequels like Empire Strikes Back. The film might have been a low point for the heroes, but it was a high point for critics and fans. Empire was a character-focused, dark, and deeply internal film that featured one of the best plot-twists in cinema history. It was also the only entry in the original trilogy that didn't end with the heroes destroying a massive space station. In fact, when the credits rolled, the heroes were in a much worse place than when they started.
The hallmarks for a sequel clearly ripping off Empire Strikes Back are that it takes the series in a darker direction, features a twist that totally reshapes the story, and finishes on a downer of a cliffhanger that baits fans desperate for narrative resolution. Not every film ripping off Empire Strikes Back does all three, but if the sequel for a movie that wasn't that dark suddenly gets a lot darker, there's a good chance the filmmakers were cribbing from the Star Wars playbook.
After the release of Dead Man's Chest, critics were quick to compare the film to Empire. And looking back on the arc of the initial Pirates trilogy, they were right to do so.
Following in the footsteps of Empire Strikes Back, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest has quite the cliffhanger ending. After a darker movie than the first, in which the main cast finds themselves split in different directions (just like Empire), the film ends with Captain Jack Sparrow at his end. Everyones' favorite pirate gets a one-way ticket to Davy Jones' locker from the Kraken, where he would have presumably stayed for eternity. Luckily for Jack, just like in Empire, his closest allies waste no time plotting his rescue with a surprise assist from the resurrected Captain Barbossa.
One of the key elements of Empire Strikes Back is Luke's relationship with Yoda. After learning the basics of the force from Ben Kenobi, Luke is ready for more training from a new Jedi Master. Luke travels to Dagobah, finds Yoda, and begins to train. Before Luke's training can finish, he goes against Yoda's warnings and leaves for Bespin to save his friends.
Similarly, in The Matrix: Reloaded, Neo meets with The Architect, the Matrix's creator. The Architect tasks Neo with going to the Source to save the Matrix, but instead, he chooses to save his love, Trinity. SyFy rightly compared this moment to Empire Strikes Back as well due to the big twist - the machines have been behind The One this whole time.
The Matrix: Reloaded ends on a classic Empire Strikes Back downbeat with the destruction of the Nebuchadnezzar and loss of most of Zion's fleet after an EMP goes off early. The machines have achieved quite the victory, and the movie ends with Neo in need of medical attention a la Luke in Empire. To make matters worse, one of the only other human survivors is secretly possessed by Agent Smith.
John Wick 2 ends with an absolutely phenomenal cliffhanger. The movie begins with Santino, a crime lord from Wick's past, returning to demand Wick fulfill the "marker" Santino has from him. This "marker" symbolizes an unbreakable promise. At first, Wick defies the request, but after Santino destroys Wick's home, he doesn't see any option but to accept the request.
After a violent series of events, Wick sets his sights on Santino after being betrayed in bad faith. Wick pursues Santino into The Continental, the one safe-zone from assassinations. But, after Santino uses this fact to taunt Wick, Wick terminates him anyway. The film ends with Wick having one hour until his excommunicado status goes into effect, and every assassin in the world will be hunting him. While it feels a bit more exhilarating than Empire's crushing final ten minutes, it still leaves audiences desperate to find out what will happen when it's literally John Wick against the world.
Just like Nerdist's review of the film announced, "Avengers; Infinity War is Marvel's Empire Strikes Back." This Marvel movie has one of the bleakest cliffhangers ever featured in a franchise film. Without the success of The Empire Strikes Back paving the way for it, there's no way a studio would have allowed a downbeat cliffhanger of this magnitude.
For those who somehow missed it, Avengers: Infinity War ends with the heroes unequivocally losing and half of all life in the entire galaxy being wiped away. Audiences watched on as fan favorites like Peter Parker and Black Panther dissolved into dust. Fans were then forced to wait an entire year to find out how or even if the heroes would finally avenging their fallen comrades in Endgame.