Modern horror franchises have a good track record when it comes to maintaining continuity. In fact, they go out of their way to make sure all the dots connect properly from film to film.
—most of these have pretty rock-solid continuity from one movie to the next (with some blips of course). But one can say they learned their lessons from the sloppy timelines and haphazard continuity of horror franchises of previous decades. Here are some truly great horror series that are also some of the worst offenders with maintaining a consistent continuity across sequels.
ditches the concept of Freddy using dreams to kill Springwood teens. Instead, he uses the dreams of one teen in order to possess him. And then he kills the local kids in real life, using his body. But we chalk this up to “Freddy is just tryin’ a new approach” and not a continuity error. The real continuity screw-ups come with
, they explain that by 1999, Freddy had killed all of Springwood’s children. This leaves the adult population with a tenuous grip on sanity. But just a few years later in
Freddy vs Jason
, the town seems totally repopulated with teens again with no explanation. It’s only glaring if you’re really paying attention to the continuity. Since this franchise is otherwise consistent, the
A Nightmare on Elm Street
series is one of the least offensive in terms of continuity violations.
the greatest horror movie ever made, the fortunes of its sequels pale compared to the original classic. William Friedkin’s film was a box office blockbuster and multiple Oscar nominee. It was a true cultural phenomenon. But the immediate sequel
Exorcist II: The Heretic
focused on Linda Blair’s character and her post-possession life, and it was a giant flop.
Thirteen years later,
The
Exorcist III
came out and totally retconned the events of
The Heretic
. Then the fourth installment, a prequel, ignored all the films except for the first. But wait! There are actually
two
different versions of the
Exorcist
prequel:
Exorcist: The Beginning
and
Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist
. The films were shot by different directors, but featured the same cast. It’s all a big mess continuity wise. We recommend folks watch only the original classic and the perfectly decent
The
Exorcist III
. And that’s it.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
The Cannon Group/New Line Cinema/Columbia Pictures
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
shocked audiences in 1974 with its incredibly raw and graphic take on horror. And yet, there wasn’t a sequel until twelve years later. In 1986, director Tobe Hooper returned for
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2
, which similarly to Sam Raimi’s
Evil Dead II
, goes into absurdist comedy territory. But it still retains the continuity of the first film, more or less. But the third installment, 1990’s
Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III,
more or less retcons the second one and only refers to the first movie. And 1995’s
Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation
features a whole new crop of killers, and it more or less ignores (but doesn’t contradict) the other movies. There are far worse offenders on this list. But the connections between these films is loose at best.
, we’re introduced to six-year-old Damien Thorn. Who, it turns out, is the Son of Satan and the Antichrist. Although the movie never specifically states when it takes place, the fashion and style clearly place it in the late ‘70s. In
Damien: Omen II,
the young Antichrist figure is 12 years old. So one would guess the sequel takes place sometime in the mid to late ‘80s.
, the date is given as 1981. The same year the movie released. And Damien is now in his 30s. The movie doesn’t explain any of this, and we guess they just expected the audience to hand wave it all away. It’s never outright stated, but the Antichrist character in
American Horror Story: Apocalypse
ages from child to adult overnight, which we’d like to think is an
New Line Cinema/Renaissance Pictures/Universal Pictures
Sam Raimi’s trilogy is groundbreaking to be sure, but he sure wasn’t concerned with the continuity of his films. We have a few glaring examples of “oopsie” timeline moments. In the first
, Raimi has Ash (Bruce Campbell) go to the cursed cabin in the woods with several friends. In the “flashback” retelling of the original 1981 film in
Evil Dead II
, Raimi rewrites his original movie and says that Ash went with only his girlfriend Linda. A lot of the second movie is essentially remaking and rewriting the first.
. It ostensibly picks up where the second film leaves off. But also not? The end sequence with Ash being worshiped by the knights and shooting the winged Deadite from
Evil Dead II
all winds up removed from canon thanks to
Army of Darkness.
This series is a blast (as is the TV series
Ash vs. Evil Dead
), but they are just not overly concerned with continuity. However, since the tone is so goofy from the second movie on, it kind of doesn’t matter.
Halloween
Compass International Pictures
John Carpenter’s 1978 classic
Halloween
is the father of the modern slasher film. And it’s also the father of terrible horror franchise continuity. This series, which is now 43 years and 12 movies in, contains no less than four separate timelines. And that’s not even counting Rob Zombie’s reboot and its sequel. Most of the films acknowledge the original 1978 film as canon. Then the others pick and choose from the rest.
Parts one through two form one timeline, part three is its own separate offshoot, four through six acknowledge the first chapter and the second. But not the third. Meanwhile, the seventh and eighth chapters refer to the first two, but not parts four through six. Got all that? Good, because we’re not done.
Halloween
2018 only acknowledges the 1978 original. Somehow, this wild continuity has not deterred moviegoers, who just ignore it all and come back to see Michael Myers slaughter the folks of his childhood hometown.
Featured Image: Compass International Pictures/20th Century Studios/New Line Cinema
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