Most horror movies have sequels. Itâs a fairly common thing. Many spawn an entire franchise, some only ever see one sequel made. For every longstanding series out there, thereâs a sequel that got lost to time. Some of them were bad movies that didnât need and shouldnât have had any kind of follow-up. Even worse are the classics that youâd hoped would be immune. Sadly, they werenât. Here are five horror sequels that you probably didnât even know existed.
976-EVIL II: The Astral Factor
Yes, 976-EVIL in itself is barely remembered. If anyone knows of it, itâs because the film was directed by Robert Englund. Maybe some people will know it as the last movie Fright Night star Stephen Geoffreys made before he transitioned into adult film. But the point is, it is not that good. Itâs not a movie that developed too much of a following which makes the fact that it has a sequel all the more surprising. This is actually a marginal continuation of the events depicted in the first feature, bringing back the original protagonist, Spike.
Day of the Dead 2: ContagiumTechnically, Day of the Dead is a sequel. Itâs the third film in George Romeroâs classic zombie trilogy and one of the directorâs best works overall. What most people donât know is that Day of the Dead also had a straight-to-video sequel in 2005, titled Day of the Dead 2: Contagium. Itâs an in-name-only sequel that has nothing to do with the plot of Romeroâs movie. Not only that, but the zombies are completely different and could not even be considered to exist in the same universe as Romeroâs flesh eaters.
Just because Psycho II worked does not mean every Hitchcock film needs a sequel. Especially something like The Birds that would likely have failed under any other director. This one is really, really bad. It rehashes the plot of the first with worse effects, thirty years later. But the worst thing about it is undoubtedly the unfortunate reappearance of Tippi Hedren in a different role.
Son of Rosemary
This one is actually based on a novel by original Rosemaryâs Baby author Ira Levin, and was then adapted as a TV movie. Rosemary has been in a coma since the birth of her child and has missed his entire upbringing. He is now an adult and assures her that he rejected the Satanic influences of the coven in the first feature. Which means that he is unwittingly becoming the Antichrist, and thatâs not only less interesting, but really doesnât make him feel like much of a threat.
The Hitcher II: Iâve Been Waiting
Surely one of the worst sequels of all time, this follow-up to The Hitcher sadly brings back C. Thomas Howell as his character from the original, but is unceremoniously killed off by Jake Buseyâour new deranged hitch-hikerâwho is heavily implied to be the reincarnation of Rutger Hauerâs original hitcher John Ryder. I canât think of a bigger insult to the first filmâs legacy than that.