Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Trilogy. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Trilogy Quotes And Sayings by 92 Authors including George Lucas,John Podhoretz,Jennifer Lopez,Holly Black,Charles Dickens for you to enjoy and share.
The first Star Wars movie was one of six original stories I had written in the form of two trilogies. After the success of Star Wars, I added another trilogy. So now there are nine stories. The original two trilogies were concieved of as six films of which the first film was number four.
Christopher Nolan's astounding third Batman feature, 'The Dark Knight Rises,' represents the true maturation of the superhero movie - and provides the key to understanding the bottomless craving moviegoers have for these films, 34 years after the Christopher Reeve Superman gave birth to the genre.
I feel like I haven't started yet. I'm looking forward to the ninth album, the thirtieth movie.
A second book that makes you rethink the first book is the Holy Grail of a series.
Third - the Track of a Storm I. In Secret II. The Grindstone III. The Shadow IV.
A lyrical, brave and complex novel that takes enormous risks and pulls them all off.
A great novel is worth one thousand films.
All novels are sequels; influence is bliss.
It's all just one film to me. Just different chapters.
The Magician's Land is a triumphant climax to the best fantasy trilogy of the decade.
If we just made one movie, 'The Hobbit,' the fact is that all the fans, the eight-, nine- and 10-year-old boys, they would watch it 1,000 times. Now, they've got three films they can watch 1,000 times.
There are so many books and movies I like; I never mention specific ones.
The trilogy composed of politics, religion and sex is the most sensitive of all issues in any society.
When a movie becomes very successful, it's automatic that people will start thinking a sequel, a prequel, a quel-quel.
Decline III, I funded myself, from the studio money. That, and I sold a lot of drugs. Kidding. Don't print that.
When I started 'City of Bones,' I knew exactly what was going to happen in 'City of Glass.' When I first started the six-book series, I thought of it as a three-book series.
Only one novel is a novel: that is a successful novel.
My favorite sequels are basically all Mike Myers films - 'Wayne's World 2,' 'Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me,' 'Shrek 2.' Anything he does, it's best the second time around. He needs to do 'So I Married an Axe Murderer 2.'
Book the Second - the Golden Thread I. Five Years Later II. A Sight III. A Disappointment IV.
I'm just trying to think what other sequels there were. There was the James Bond movies and not many. I think sequels have become a recent idea of franchising.
I have finally reverted the publishing rights for my Cocoon Trilogy back to me and, for the first time, e-published the final book - Butterfly: Tomorrow's Children. Cocoon, the movie and the book, was only the beginning.
We had to do the same thing here. To top that sequel was quite a task. Mike had a couple of good conceptual humour and character ideas, which got me back into it.
I finished 'The Hunger Games' trilogy, and I love most anything with zombies.
The first series I wrote, 'L.A. Candy,' was always meant to be a three-book series, so when I started out it was all outlined that way and by the time I was done with the third book, I had become so involved and the process and the stories, I was a little bit sad to be done.
It seems like a lot when you have three movies back to back but that's not really how it is.
This sizzling menage romance series is the hottest book you'll have read in a really long time!
Rises XXIII. Fire Rises XXIV. Drawn to the Loadstone Rock Book the Third -
'Dirtiest Secret' is Dallas Sykes' story. And it is a stand-alone trilogy that readers can come to completely fresh.
I wrote long reviews of all four books if you want to take a look.
We partner with movies that stand for more than the latest bestseller.
As soon as I finished the first book, I wrote a second, which I hope to sell this year, and I have just about finished the third book in the series. Two more are already outlined. I'm in this for the long haul.
To have three movies coming out at the same time - I probably will never have that again in my life.
THE THREE is really wonderful. A mix of Michael Crichton and Shirley Jackson, hard to put down and vastly entertaining.
I've always tried to really focus on The Hunger Games movie, knowing that, yes, these are amazing books and I would feel like a failure, if I didn't get all three of them made.
For someone who loves literature, and all books on principle, being asked to name three titles over a half century of serious reading is akin to asking one to recall their three favorite sunsets.
Three 'Jurassic Park' movies isn't enough! You want more!
Jack Campbell's dazzling new series is military science fiction at its best. Not only does he tell a yarn of great adventure and action, but he also develops the characters with satisfying depth. I thoroughly enjoyed this rip-roaring read, and I can hardly wait for the next book.
A whole society in 7 books. Absolutely fabulous from the inside and outside.
'Rescue Me' is the first book in a three-book series. Although, like all my series, the books are purposely written so that readers do not have to read them in order.
No writer can really sustain two huge - I hate the word 'franchises.'
There has to be consistent emergence of two or three films - narratively, stylistically, consistently demonstrating you are here to go on. And on that kind of basis, I'm not seeing much. I'm just waiting to see.
The L.A Trilogy is a series of three novels starring Ray, a robot detective, and his boss, a computer called Googol. Set in an alternative version of 1960s Los Angeles, each book will be more or less standalone but together will form an overarching story arc with 'Brisk Money' as the origin story.
I hate sequels. They're never as good as the first book.
If I had a story idea that I felt would work best in three volumes I might write a trilogy eventually. I'd very likely write it all at once, though, so I could work on it as a whole and not broken into individual volumes.
What I like about the third movie is you get to see a side of Carlisle you haven't seen before. You actually get to see what his vampire capabilities are because there's some great battle sequences. It's my favorite book. Carlisle is holding on to that humanity. He doesn't want to be a vampire.
Why not dream your own wonderful sequels? When you have finished a book, it can go on in your mind, the characters doing just what you want them to do.
After I did the first Die Hard I said I'd never do another, same after I did the second one and the third. The whole genre was running itself into the ground.
I think the first movie I ever saw was a 'Star Wars' triple bill, when 'Return of the Jedi' was released.
You really get to direct the movie three times when it comes to the action sequences and the set pieces.
The trilogy of "Before Sunrise," "Before Sunset" and last-year's "Before Midnight" returns periodically to
I always feel like every film takes the franchise and hangs it in the balance.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
THE UNBREAKABLE VOW
An unforgettable tale of love, lust, faith, betrayal, and redemption. A powerful, mesmerizing suspense novel-a tour de force!
Sequels are desperate.
Summer movie idea: take all the sequels that are out right now, and make movies about their backstories.
I am a fan of sequels even though they are inevitably awful.
I saw the book thief three times.
The Lord of the Rings trilogy restored the balance in the Force after the Star Wars prequels ruined everything that was awesome about being a nerd at the movies.
'Shantaram' is the second in the series of a quartet of novels that I have planned about my life but is the first to be written. The third book is a sequel to 'Shantaram,' the first a prequel.
Forget movies - I'd rather choose books!
'Bombay Velvet' is my first film in a trilogy about Bombay, before it became a metropolis.
I never actually plan sequels. They demand to be done.
I'm a big fan of the 'Harry Potter' movies and 'The Lord of the Rings' films.
I'm a really big 'Lord of the Rings' fan. I have all the extended editions.
Hey! Thanks for taking the time to read Trapped in a Video Game: Book Three. I hope you had as much fun reading it as I had writing it. I'm currently working on Book Three, and I plan on releasing it December, 2016.
My gut feeling about sequels is that they should be premeditated: You should try to write a trilogy first or at least sketch out a trilogy if you have any faith in your film.
Everyone's clamoring for the fourth book in the 'Fifty Shades' trilogy, which makes me laugh. Just the part of 'a fourth book in trilogy' that makes me laugh, not the clamoring for the next book.
I've read the 'Mortal Instruments' series; I was obsessed with those.
I suppose sequels are inevitable for a writer of a certain age.
Multiplicity was a movie that tested really well. People seeing the movie really liked it, but then the studio couldn't market it. We opened on a weekend with nine other films.
All middle-class novels are about the trials of three, all upper-class novels about mass fornication, all revolutionary novels about a bad man turned good by a tractor.
I still think 'The Lord of the Rings' is the greatest literary achievement in my lifetime. Like so many other people, I couldn't wait for the second and then the third book. Nothing like it had ever been written.
There is a story, there is a scene which you always miss and you never pay attention at it... (The Ring 1)
The Three Musketeers - as
I happen to be a huge 'Lord of the Rings' fan. I do an annual marathon of the extended editions.
End of the First Book
Something: the BookBook-- Ted Stetson
I'm one of those who can't read the books after they've seen the movie.
When you make a film for a million and a half dollars and it opens at 20 million, the next question out of everyone's mouth is, 'When's the next one, when's the next one, when's the next one?'
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Harry
Nine Deads - powerful movie everyone should check it out.
Yes, there is a sequel on the way!
'California Bones' is the first volume in my trilogy about Daniel Blackland, a wizard trying to survive in a world that eats wizards. It's a book about friends and family, trust and betrayal, the love of power and the power of love.
Second films are, you know, like 'difficult second albums', so it's a tricky position to be in but I think he's made a highly accomplished film.
A whole new generation is looking at the videos, and going to the video shop and buying the re-release of the complete trilogy, which you can buy at a reasonable price.
All those who love thrillers will find in Michael Alexiades's first novel a source of great pleasure and satisfaction. It combines suspense and knowledge, experience and imagination. His grateful readers will now wait for the next.
Life is a movie, but there will never be a sequel.
CHAPTER I - M. MYRIEL
A lot of people ask for sequels, but what they really want is just to know the characters are happy and safe.
I have always been uncomfortable with a series of movies. I hate that word 'franchise' - it always makes me think of French fries. What I felt each time was that we were going for broke, that this was going to be the last in the series. You can't count on anything.
Michael Connelly's Series Order Diana Gabaldon's Series Order Patricia Cornwell's Series Order Fern Michael's Series Order Robert Ludlum's Series Order Harlan Coben's Series Order Terry Pratchett's Series Order J.A. Jance's Series Order Tom Clancy's
Those movies sure got me into a rut.
There's a new star in the YA firmament - A. K. Downing's series, beginning with Into The Air, is sure to be a reader favorite right up there with The Hunger Games and The 100 trilogy.
I really like 'The Three Kings' DVD. I love that movie and all the extra footage and documentaries.
Human Millipede 6 was the highest-grossing movie of the summer and returned Nicholas Cage to Oscar-winning status.
After 'Pitch Perfect,' I only want to be in sequels. No. 2 of whatever.
The adventure of the soul among the masterpieces.
It's not that I ever sat down and outlined a trilogy, but I always have a sense of what size an idea is when I start it.
All my favorite books and movies are franchises like 'Harry Potter' and 'Lord of the Rings,' so that was always the dream, that maybe I'll get to write a series of my own.