This autumn sees Beetlejuice Beetlejuice released in cinemas, featuring much of its original cast.
It鈥檚 been 36 years since audiences were last thrilled by Tim Burton's original movie, which was released in 1988.
But Beetlejuice isn鈥檛 the only fictional character to keep fans waiting a long time for their return. Here are five follow-ups to famous films and books that were decades in the making.
Star Wars: Return Of The Jedi - Star Wars: The Phantom Menace (16 Years)
Star Wars creator George Lucas had always imagined his story 鈥 famously set 鈥榓 long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away鈥 鈥 as being a nine movie series. But after the last of the first trilogy, Return Of The Jedi in 1983, fans would have to wait an agonising 16 years before the next instalment (which is technically a prequel) The Phantom Menace, in 1999.
Lucas said that it took so long because he was waiting for filmmaking technology to catch up with his vision for the story. 鈥淚 had to come up with a way of doing it, and that鈥檚 what digital technology brought me,鈥 he recalled in 2019. 鈥淚 had Yoda but he couldn鈥檛 fight. I had cities, but I couldn鈥檛 build models that big. I waited until we had the technology to do it.鈥
To Kill A Mockingbird - Go Set A Watchman (55 years)
Harper Lee鈥檚 novel To Kill A Mockingbird was first published in 1960. Told through the eyes of eight-year-old 鈥楽cout鈥 Finch it told the story of her father Atticus Finch, a lawyer in the depression-era Alabama who defends a black man wrongly accused of a serious crime against a white woman.
It was ecstatically reviewed, sold 40 million copies, and became recognised as a modern classic. But Lee subsequently pretty much vanished from public life, apparently writing no more books and declining requests for interviews.
But in 2015, a second book was published. Go Set A Watchman, which featured the same characters but was set after the events of the first novel, had in fact been written before To Kill A Mockingbird. But Harper Lee had been unhappy with it and had used parts of it to write the original book. She died a year after it was finally published, aged 89.
Bambi - Bambi II (64 Years)
The record for the longest gap between a movie and its sequel is held by Disney animated classic Bambi. The original film, which followed the adventures of the young fawn Bambi, and his friends Thumper and Flower, was released in 1942.
But the sequel, Bambi II, didn鈥檛 come out until 2006. Put another way 鈥 a child who was in their early teens when they first saw the movie on original release would be well into their retirement by the time the loveable deer returned to the screen.
So, was the six decade wait worth it? Hard to say. Despite the presence of Sir Patrick Stewart as the voice of Bambi鈥檚 father, Bambi II didn鈥檛 even get a big screen release in the US, going straight to DVD instead.
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey 鈥 Bill & Ted Face The Music (29 years)
The world was first introduced to likeable teens Theodore 鈥楾ed鈥 Logan (Keanu Reeves) and Bill S. Preston, Esq. (Alex Winter) in 1989鈥檚 Bill And Ted鈥檚 Excellent Adventure. The movie, about a pair of Californian pals who go on an adventure through time, was a surprise hit, and a sequel, Bill And Ted鈥檚 Bogus Journey followed in 1991.
Then the most excellent dudes vanished for nearly three decades. But in 2020, 29 years after their last appearance, the pair reappeared in Bill & Ted Face The Music. 鈥淜eanu and I had no intention of making a third Bill & Ted movie,鈥 Alex Winter told the NME. 鈥淭he thing that hooked us back was the idea that we could expand on these guys in an interesting way. Things have not worked out exactly the way they thought they would when they were young.鈥
Watership Down 鈥 Tales From Watership Down (24 years)
Richard Adams鈥 novel Watership Down, about a group of rabbits forced to abandon their warren and survive in the outside world, was a huge success when it was published in 1972, even though it had previously been turned down by a number of publishers. Perhaps it is even more surprising that it was his first novel, written when he was 52.
After the book's and subsequent 1978 film鈥檚 success, Adams wrote many stories featuring animal characters. But in 1996, nearly a quarter of a century after he had written the original novel, he finally revisited the beloved characters of Watership Down in Tales From Watership Down, a collection of 19 short stories that featured the places and many of the animals from the original. Adams died in 2016, aged 96.
This article was originally published in May 2022 and updated in August 2024
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