You’re thinking of The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain.
Does anyone else sometimes read that as meaning the englishman went up as a hill, but came back down as a mountain? No? darts away
You’re thinking of The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain.
Does anyone else sometimes read that as meaning the englishman went up as a hill, but came back down as a mountain? No? darts away
Despite their order in the electromagnetic spectrum, the TV series “The Thin Blue Line” does not follow The Thin Red Line.
I heard that Deliverance was the sequel to Stand and Deliver. . .
Is Bull Durham the prequel to Bull Durham? It works either way.
I meant Raging Bull. I’m new at this. :wally
I was eagerly looking forward to the TV adaptation of Taxi Driver. Imagine my disappointment when I saw Taxi.
And don’t forget that The Story of O is not Regarding Henry.
Dumbo doesn’t have a sequel about his brother, Rambo
Similarly, Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House isn’t the prequel to The Castle.
Drugstore Cowboy isn’t a spinoff or sequel of Midnight Cowboy. You could also try taking out The Ice Storm after seeing Before the Rain.
Spaceballs doesn’t involve the characters from Meatballs walking on the moon.
Reanimator has nothing to do with inducing Der Ahrnold into reprising his cyborg role… again.
Enemy at the Gates, The Ninth Gate, and The Ninth Element have nothing in common, except for high production values.
To all the aforementioned “Henry…” flicks, we can add Henry and June and Henry, Portait of a Serial Killer…
Was Mars Attacks! the sequel to Earth Girls Are Easy?
The classic swashbuckling action of the revenge story The Man In the Iron Mask is not to be confused with the OTT Jim Carrey and CGI effects in The Mask… and fuhgeddabout the Cher/Eric Stolz melodrama, Mask.
Last but not least, the romances of Open Your Eyes (Abre Los Ojos) and Close Your Eyes really have nothing in common.
I enjoyed both Malcom X and American History X but when I ask about the nine earlier movies in each series the guy at the video store slowly edges away from me…
I dread trying to track down Mystery Science Theater 1 - 2999.

This made me laugh, not least because I can imagine Bing and Bob doing something rather similar to that film.
The Great Zamboni, you realize I may have to kill you.

You don’t know how badly I’ve wanted to write a triple crossover fic with these two movies and the X-Files since you said this… 
Anyone who rents Tupac: Resurrection and Alien: Resurrection expecting either two gory horror movies or a movie about a dead rap star and an obscure rapper are going to be very confused and possibly enraged.
If you put together Plan 9 From Outer Space and the Harrison Ford flick ** Force 10 From Navarone**, well, who knows what might happen?
What about **King Kong[/nb] and The King and I? Fay Wray teaches a monarch monkey the ways of civilization and then falls in love with him? 
The Deer Hunter is in no way the sequel toBambi. Never make that mistake near your children.
Just look in “Someday, A.D.”, “Deep 13”, or “Time and Space.” 
Actually, The King and I is the sequel to Withnail and I
I demand to have some booze, you Majesty!
After Anthony and Cleopatra, Liz Taylor does not appear next in Cleopatra Jones.
Friday Foster is not the prequel to Saturday Night Fever, nor does that movie precede Any Given Sunday.
When We Were Kings, The Emperor Jones and Lord of The Flies do not form a trilogy called Three Kings.
Finally, it’s important to note that Coffy with Brown Sugar, and Cornbread, Earl and Me, seen with a *Watermelon Man, * while viewing a Kentucky Fried Movie do not constitute Soul Food. I don’t care how much Grease there is.
Tarzan, the Ape Man is, sadly, not the prequel to Planet of the Apes and its multitude of sequels. Nor is Planet of the Apes the first movie in an intergalactic travel series that would include Mission to Mars, Forbidden Panet and Red Planet, to say nothing of Beyond the Planet of the Ultravixens.
So, what about Viva Max and Viva Las Vegas? Those two go together, don’t they?
How about Goodbye Columbus and Bye bye, Birdie?
True story (more or less): The film adaptation of the stage play The Madness of George III , dealing with King George III’s descent into mental illness, was retitled *The Madness of King George * so as not to confuse American moviegoers expecting it to be a sequel in a slasher franchise.