Choose watching a needless sequel to a classic movie

Choose watching a needless sequel to a classic movie.

Other urls found in this thread:

rabb.it/promertkaraca
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

Choose being a good follow up to classic film and being a reflection on our generation of tourists visiting our own pasts.

>makes a new thread because he got btfo in the old one by people who had actually seen it instead of jumping to conclusions
I know it's chic right now to hate incessant remakes and sequels but you're not achieving anything here

There's a second book you fucking idiot

I didn't make the old thread, I just came back from seeing it. I thought it was alright, but I didn't really see its purpose. Don't see why they made a sequel other than for the money.

How old are you? I'm not asking in a insulting way, just curious because the film might not cross generational boundaries too well.

Choose the catalogue

Why make anything? The writer/director was still interested in the characters and there was a potential audience, he wanted to revisit them, mostly a platform for appraising the original, which is a purely artistic motivation, and it shows.
I'm guessing your favourite movie wasn't put out for free?

Is this released in europe or something? It says it isnt out until march here in burger land.

Thought it was fine. Not great, but pretty decent. For a film that kept banging on about how nostalgia and sentimentality are crap, there sure is a lot of it in there.

Which this film draws almost nothing at all from bar the idea of Renton coming back to Leith after years away.

I mean, fuck, if you're going to adapt Porno, at least stick Juice Terry in it. He's the best character in the entire franchise.

Just the UK so far

Name 3 good sequels.

Reviews are good and it seems like it has a purpose.

rabb.it/promertkaraca

Get in, junkies!

I'm 26.

Just sad we'll probably never get a Blade Artist adaptation. Begbie's the most interesting character by far, and that ending is gold.

>When he exits, the first thing he sees is the man who spilled the wine, looking fearfully at him. However, Francis Begbie's stare does not linger on him, but rather on the passenger sitting next to him, on his left, whom he instantly recognises, despite the glasses and the thinner hair. The old Fort boy looks like he's aged well: wearing a light blue shirt, open at the neck, with navy trousers; reading a magazine called DJ. Frank Begbie looms over the nervous, drunken flyer, then leans across him, as the other man, aware of a lurking presence, lowers his magazine and looks up, his eyes widening in the shock of recognition: facing the dyslexic boy he took that punishment for, years ago, all in the solidarity of teenage friendship. Frank Begbie keeps his breathing slow and even - in through the nose, out through the mouth - as he says, with a smile, - Hello there, my old buddy. Long time no see.

Aliens, Terminator 2, Trainspotting 2

Fine.

>I'm 26.

Yeah it might be the characters are more relatable to people 10 - 20 years older than you.

Like the ones who were 20 - 25 when Trainspotting came out.

The "tourist in your own youth" is very meaningful when you hit your mid-30s

Kermode approves

He likes most movies though

Choose 9/11 never happened, and if it did it was the jews