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A final' film will still lead to more sequels
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Mark Hamill stars in "Star Wars: The Last Jedi," but is he really the end of the Jedi line? Probably not. We'll find out Dec. 15. - photo by Chris Hicks
The movie that topped the box office last week was the eighth in the Saw franchise. Opening on the weekend before Halloween was a smart marketing strategy as fans of the gory horror series came out in force.

But dont look for it to stay on top this weekend.

Titled Jigsaw, this new film arrived seven years after the seventh in the series, which was titled wait for it Saw 3D: The Final Chapter.

So the 2010 film wasnt really the final chapter? Hollywood lied to us?

Shocking, I know.

Come to think of it, the killer in the series, John Kramer, aka Jigsaw (Tobin Bell), has been dead since the third Saw movie, so how does he keep coming back?

Easy. He just passes the baton and shows up on screen in flashbacks. You cant keep a tricked-up torturer down.

When Sean Connery stepped away from the James Bond franchise for the second time after Diamonds Are Forever (1971), he was inevitably asked if fans could expect to see him renew his 007 license to kill in the future.

Connery famously declared, Never again.

Then, in 1983, he played Bond one more time and came up with the films title himself: Never Say Never Again.

At least he had a sense of humor about it. Im not so sure about all the horror films that use the word final in their titles without irony.

Heck, the Friday the 13th movies did it twice!

Does anyone remember the fourth Friday the 13th movie in 1984, subtitled The Final Chapter? It wasnt.

And neither was the ninth Friday the 13th film: Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday (1993). Three more features followed.

The third Omen movie in 1981 was titled simply The Final Conflict, but it was followed 10 years later by a TV-movie sequel.

In 1991, the sixth A Nightmare on Elm Street picture was titled Freddys Dead: The Final Nightmare. Three years later, another sequel followed.

Children of the Corn II (1992) was subtitled The Final Sacrifice, but then came eight more sequels.

Suddenly, a title like 2011's Final Destination 5 begins to make sense.

And in some cases, the titles of follow-up films attempted to get creative, if not explanatory, on how a sequel could follow a final.

After Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter, the next one was Friday the 13th: A New Beginning. And the Omen film that followed The Final Conflict was Omen IV: The Awakening. (My vote would have been for Friday the 13th: Just Kidding and Omen IV: Really? You Fell for That?)

And after Freddys Dead: The Final Nightmare, the next one was titled Wes Cravens New Nightmare (1994). That one was a sort of self-referential spoof, but it didnt stop the series momentum as another sequel and a reboot followed.

And outside of the horror genre, how about Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)? Those werent the last.

Maybe franchise films with final in the title should be required to add the word allegedly.

Hey, its the movies, where truth in advertising is an oxymoron.

Of course, its not just the movies. Its also TV advertising. And political advertising. And product advertising.

OK, its just advertising.

But the point is, when you see a movie title with the word final or last or never or no more or we mean it, honest, this is the end of the series it actually means until next time.

This year alone weve had Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, Transformers: The Last Knight and on Dec. 15, well see Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

Yeah, right.

Next, youll be telling me that Superman really did die in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and wont be showing up in the Justice League movie on Nov. 17.
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