![]() ![]() ![]() After all, I put out for a HP7 Part 2 ticket, just like I did for all the previous movies (although count me out of Twilight). I get it, and I'm not wholly averse to the process. Now Lionsgate is applying the same logic to their Hunger Games trilogy, which will, of course, be a four-parter. The second movie will be released in November and will undoubtedly be a massive blockbuster. Meanwhile, the folks at Lionsgate made the same move with the fourth and final Twilight novel, turning it into Breaking Dawn Part 1 and Part 2. But it was still a blatant cash grab-albeit one that worked. Sure, the book is long and the additional screen time allowed the studio to fill out details they might have skipped in one movie. With multi-film adaptations proving to be long-term money-makers that keep drawing in viewers (a phenomenon one might give some credit to Jackson's work on The Lord of the Rings), executives realized that if they could stretch out popular books into two movies, they could actually double their money.įirst, Warner Brothers split the seventh Harry Potter book into The Deathly Hallows Part 1 and Part 2. Since then, however, Hollywood has taken notice of the massive earning potential of sequels. ![]()
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