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Why Two-Part Finales Like 'Wicked: For Good' Don't Work
TV & Streaming

Why Two-Part Finales Like ‘Wicked: For Good’ Don’t Work

by jummy84 November 26, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s not polite to comment when someone takes seconds at the Thanksgiving dinner table. And yet, this holiday season, “Wicked: For Good” is asking the world to watch as Universal double-dips on the magic of Jon M. Chu’s Oscar-winning musical from last year. 

Starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande (again), this paltry sequel adapts and expands on the second half of the beloved Broadway show from 2003. “Wicked: For Good” has already made more than $223 million at the global box office. But with 69 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and 58 percent on Metacritic, it’s a disappointment by most other metrics. 

IndieWire’s Anne Thompson and Ryan Lattanzio projected a tough awards season ahead for the film on their most recent episode of Screen Talk. Lackluster follow-ups are tough to swallow in the best of circumstances, but “Wicked: For Good” feels like extra nasty backwash in 2025. 

NUREMBERG, Russell Crowe as Hermann Goring (left), 2025. ph: Scott Garfield / © Sony Pictures Classics / Courtesy Everett Collection

There’s all that timely political messaging that got fumbled. But the sequel also comes amid one of the worst box office seasons in recent memory. For several weeks, we’ve watched critically acclaimed movies fail to secure the audiences that critics said they deserved. Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Bugonia” has yet to make its money back despite stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons (though digital rentals, where the studios take in up to 80 percent of the profits, started today). And even bigger hits like Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” have inspired analysts like IndieWire’s Brian Welk to ask, “What even is a box-office flop anymore?” 

“Wicked: For Good” will still make oceans of money in ticket sales and buckets more when you account for its pink-and-green Cynthia/Ariana merchandising. But the film industry borrows against itself by insulting hungry audiences with a bad strategy we know doesn’t work. 

Give a Mouse a Cliffhanger, He’ll Make Harry Potter… Jump Off It?

TV shows and books have capitalized on cliffhangers ever since Thomas Hardy’s “A Pair of Blue Eyes” left its hero literally dangling from a rock in 1873. The Wachowskis’ “Matrix” trilogy broke ground by shooting the sequels “Reloaded” and “Revolutions” simultaneously and releasing them just six months apart — a strategy tried on earlier films and sharpened to blockbuster success in 2003. That year, Quentin Tarantino also cut “Kill Bill” in half. Saving the finale for spring, the samurai epic proved auteurs could be series unto themselves. 

That same strategy eventually gave us the most lucrative franchises of the century. From the Star Wars sequels to Peter Jackson’s epic “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, the trend culminated in the $32 billion Marvel Cinematic Universe that analysts agree has helped redefine “success” at the movies today.

J.K. Rowling did the same for books in the late ’90s, introducing young adults to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter and steadily expanding it into a reliable touchstone of global pop culture. “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games” gained massive audiences, too, and even lesser YA best-sellers like “Percy Jackson & the Olympians” ended up on the big screen. 

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2, from left: Rupert Grint, Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Matthew Lewis, 2011. ©2011 Warner Bros. Ent. Harry Potter publishing rights ©J.K.R. Harry Potter characters, names and related indicia are trademarks of and ©Warner Bros. Ent. All rights reserved./Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

When the Harry Potter story concluded on the page, the movie version needed to feel just as big as the ending already on shelves. Running 784 pages in most editions, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” was a long book, no doubt. But Warner Bros.’ decision to release the finale as two parts between 2010 and 2011 was an international news item. The movies did well for the studio and director David Yates, receiving widespread critical acclaim and a total of five Oscar nominations between them. They fared even better on the financial front, with “Part 1” grossing $960 million worldwide and “Part 2” raking in $1.3 billion. 

“Twilight,” “Hunger Games,” and the Beginning of the End(s)

Other franchises followed suit. Both “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games” bifurcated their finales, and the collective four films still did major blockbuster numbers at the box office. But it soon became clear the strategy that had worked so well for Harry Potter was already turning sour. 

Between 2011 and 2012, the “Twilight: Breaking Dawn” duology earned $967 million internationally, grossing $430 million on “Part 1” and $537 million on “Part 2.” Compare that to “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay,” released between 2014 and 2015, which made $782 million worldwide despite a sharp decline in ticket sales; $418 million for “Part 1” dropped to $364 million for “Part 2.” 

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY - PART 2, from left: Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence, Mahershala Ali, Liam Hemsworth, 2015. ph: Murray Close/©Lionsgate/Courtesy Everett Collection
“The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2”©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection

Where Warner Bros. and Yates delivered cinematic work worthy of a two-movie event, Summit Entertainment and Lionsgate spurred their filmmakers to stumble over the finish line. “Breaking Dawn” director Bill Condon and “Mockingjay” director Francis Lawrence were lambasted for taking hugely popular series and making them feel overly long for the wrong reasons. (Note that Lawrence has since righted that wrong with an excellent “Hunger Games” prequel.)  

“Twilight” was never considered the pinnacle of storytelling, but “Hunger Games” did particularly poorly trying to follow up the fervor of 2013’s “Catching Fire.” The series’ first sequel is still regarded by many as the best installment in the franchise, but the bloated two-part take is brutal to watch. There wasn’t enough source material to work with, and thanks to the novel’s dystopian setting, the second half felt almost too depressing for fantasy fans in packed theaters. 

Why Hollywood May Never Learn This Lesson

Lionsgate doubled down on YA fiction in the early 2010s, pushing its adaptation of the “Divergent” series as another global event. Starring Shailene Woodley, the sci-fi franchise never made it to the finale, effectively imploding mid-story between parts. When 2015’s “Insurgent” underperformed at the same time “Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2” faltered, that set up 2016’s “Allegiant: Part 1” for a fail. Bad reviews didn’t stop the movie from turning a profit (estimated at $71 million), but “Part 2” died in development as a drawn-out mistake. 

That storied nosedive — or, at the least, the wisdom behind it — has kept the two-part doldrums at bay and out of box offices for most of the last decade. With more story than most filmmakers could handle, Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune” adaptation from 2021 and 2024 needed to be two parts to make sense. And it’ll be up to director Nia DaCosta to stick the landing on Danny Boyle’s original “28 Years” Later trilogy, which doesn’t adapt anything but, like Jon Chu’s new musical, prolongs a metaphor for fascism.

Yet the writing was on the wall when it came to “Wicked: For Good.” Universal turned what could have been one excellent “Wicked” movie into one great one and one really bad one. Exhausting and dark, the second half of this once-excellent adaptation may tarnish Chu’s legacy among fans, critics, and Academy voters. But with its ending left open to spinoffs, and history repeating itself on almost every other global stage, the wicked ways of the two-part finale strategy seem likely to ride again.

November 26, 2025 0 comments
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Squid Game And Alice In Borderland: The Uncanny Similarity Between Their Series Finales - What Does It Mean? | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Squid Game And Alice In Borderland: The Uncanny Similarity Between Their Series Finales – What Does It Mean? | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix’s Squid Game and Alice in Borderland are frequently compared for having the same high-stakes survival ideas—but with both series having grown in the process, the Japanese series has appeared to leave the competition in the dust, particularly after the emotional end of its season three on September 25, 2025.

AIB, adapted from Haro Aso’s manga and helmed by Shinsuke Sato, launched in December 2020 on Netflix. It depicts Arisu, a jobless gamer who is thrown into a different Tokyo in which individuals must play deadly games. He becomes fast friends with fellow player Usagi, and both characters gradually develop, discovering purpose, love, and finally peace. Unlike Squid Game, Alice in Borderland is a manga adaptation, but its final season took creative liberties while still delivering a satisfying and hopeful ending.

Squid Game, the brainchild of Hwang Dong-hyuk, premiered in 2021 and took the world by storm. It is the story of Gi-hun, a financially strapped man who wins a deadly competition, but is left tormented by survivor’s guilt. Although Squid Game began as a scathing commentary on capitalism, fans say that its message lost intensity as time went on, particularly with Season 3, which concluded on a pessimistic note and previewed a U.S. spin-off rather than closure.

In both Squid Game and Alice in Borderland, a unique plot device is employed. The manga version of Alice in Borderland features a pregnant character, Usagi, and in the final game, her unborn baby becomes a contestant, aiding the players in achieving victory. Similarly, in the Korean show Squid Game, an unnamed baby takes her deceased mother’s place, influencing the storyline

Also Read: Get Ready for the Final Showdown! Alice in Borderland Season 3 Dialogues Give Us a Sneak Peek at the Joker

#INHUN — you couldn’t save me but you can let me go

Very lazy edit but its been a while so yay hi how are you guys ???#squidgame #456×001 pic.twitter.com/Fh3x9Rli5y

— squid #1 Hwang In-ho hater (@su_cr3tte) October 5, 2025

Unsurprisingly, both series finished on scenes filmed in California—Squid Game launched a new iteration of the games with Cate Blanchett, while AIB suggested global upheaval and an enigmatic waitress called Alice, opening doors for future tales.

Also Read: The Battle Within! Squid Game Season 3’s Most Haunting Dialogues as Seong Gi-hun Faces His Demons

Fan reactions make the distinction even more evident. Alice in Borderland was lauded for providing closure and emotional resonance, while Squid Game was bashed for putting franchise potential ahead of story. As one fan described, “AIB healed a wound Squid Game left behind.”

alice in borderland you will always be THAT SERIES#AliceInBorderland3 pic.twitter.com/uUf8LBj2oS

— (@trainslaa) September 25, 2025

Although both shows can proceed in different mediums, Alice in Borderland stands on firmer ground today—providing a thorough, emotional story fans won’t soon forget.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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