The Best Sequel TV Series


Key Takeaways

  • Baymax! continues the lovable adventures of the titular character in San Fransokyo, appealing to both young and nostalgic audiences.
  • X-Men ’97 picks up where the original series left off, with a refreshed cast and potential for lasting fan appeal beyond Marvel’s plans.
  • Better Call Saul expertly explores the backstory of Saul Goodman, flipping Breaking Bad’s narrative and investing viewers in new characters.

Over the years, there have been plenty of television shows that audiences just can’t get enough of. For a few of them, the creators or studios behind them capitalized on that hunger for more by green-lighting sequel series that showcase the events that happen after, before, or adjacent to a particular show. In some cases, these shows even continue stories of popular movies.

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While some of these sequel series are better left forgotten in TV history, others may have even bested their source material. These ten shows not only brilliantly followed up the shows that took place before them, but they also made for their own great, individual adventures as well. From animated series to prestige dramas, these are the best TV sequels, ranked.

10

Baymax!

Baymax’s Adventures Continued On TV

Baymax! Production Still

Network

Disney+

Air Date

2022

Predecessor

Big Hero 6: The Series (2017-2021)

Main Cast

Scott Adsit, Ryan Potter, Maya Rudolph, Lilimar, Jaboukie Young-White

Baymax made his screen debut in the 2014 animated film Big Hero 6, which was followed by a TV series, Big Hero 6: The Series. That series, which reunited many of the cast members of the film, ran for three seasons, but it wasn’t the end of the road for the Baymax character. Disney+ produced its own sequel series for the Big Hero 6 show, simply titled Baymax!

Compared to the other series, which focused on all the characters from Big Hero 6, Baymax! follows the titular character helping out with various problems in San Fransokyo. It may be only six episodes, but the lovable antics of Baymax throughout this series will delight both younger viewers and more adult audiences who are nostalgic for the first film.

9

X-Men ’97

The Iconic Mutant Show Returns On Disney+

x-men-97-cyclops-storm-gambit-rogue

Network

Disney+

Air Date

2024 – present

Predecessor

X-Men: The Animated Series (1992–1997)

Main Cast

Ray Chase, Jennifer Hale, Alison Sealy-Smith, Cal Dodd, Matthew Waterson, Ross Marquand

As part of Disney’s acquisition of 20th Century Fox, the company revived one beloved part of the X-Men franchise: the 1990s animated series., as X-Men ’97. The series picks up exactly where the previous show ended, following the superhero team as they pick up the pieces following Charles Xavier’s disappearance at the end of the previous season.

Though it’s more adequately categorized as a reboot than a sequel, it’s given the sequel treatment with a new title and new cast members, though some, like Cal Dodd, return from the original series. It may have little to do with Marvel’s future plans for the X-Men, but given the fan reception, it wouldn’t be surprising if X-Men ’97 stuck around for a while.

8

MacGruber

The MacGyver Parody Went From Big Screen To Small Screen

MacGruber, Piper, and Vicky at night

Network

Peacock

Air Date

2021

Predecessor

MacGruber (2010)

Main Cast

Will Forte, Kristen Wiig, Ryan Phillippe, Laurence Fishburne, Sam Elliott, Billy Zane, Maya Rudolph

MacGruber is one of many entries on this list that is technically a sequel, but not for another TV series. The Will Forte character, a parody of MacGyver, originated on Saturday Night Live and was created by Forte, John Solomon, and Jorma Taccone. In 2010, the character got his own epic action movie, which co-starred Forte’s SNL pal Kristen Wiig.

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While a film sequel to MacGruber was unlikely due to the film’s financial failure, Peacock gave it a second shot as a sequel TV series, set ten years after the first film where MacGruber is hired to find the President’s kidnapped daughter. It may not work for those who aren’t already fans of the sketch or first film, but for those who are, it’s a dream come true.

7

Lilo & Stitch: The Series

Disney’s Beloved Series Started As A Movie

Lilo and Stitch Disney

Network

Disney Channel

Air Date

2003–2006

Predecessor

Lilo & Stitch (2002)

Main Cast

Daveigh Chase, Chris Sanders, David Ogden Stiers, Kevin McDonald, Kevin Michael Richardson, Tia Carrere

Disney’s Lilo & Stitch: The Series is probably one of the few cases where the TV sequel was more popular than the original. Lilo & Stitch was first a film that came out in 2002, and was quickly followed-up with a sequel TV series on Disney Channel, following the day-to-day adventures of the titular duo.

Most of the voice cast from the film returned for the television series, which ran for a total of two seasons with 65 episodes. The series also aired in conjunction with direct-to-video films, beginning with Stitch! The Movie, which was essentially a backdoor pilot for the animated Disney Channel series, a technique that certainly worked for audiences.

6

Mork And Mindy

A Guest Appearance In Happy Days Paid Off

Mindy and Mork

Network

ABC

Air Date

1978-1982

Predecessor

Happy Days

Main Cast

Robin Williams, Pam Dawber, Conrad Janis, Elizabeth Kerr, Tom Poston, Jonathan Winters

Happy Days is one of the most famous sitcoms of all time on its own, but the show also inspired iconic sitcoms just from single episodes. One of those episodes was “My Favorite Orkan,” which introduced Robin Williams in a guest-starring role as Mork, an alien who attempts to kidnap Ron Howard’s character in the original episode.

The episode became so popular that ABC gave Williams his own spin-off, Mork & Mindy, in which Mork lives with Mindy, who he slowly falls in love with as she teaches him about human behavior. While this show has few ties to Happy Days, it deserves a spot on this list for having its own life, as well as essentially skyrocketing Williams’ comedy career.

5

Star Trek: The Next Generation

A New Crew, But The Same Timeline

Marina Sirtis Brent Spiner Patrick Stewart in Star Trek The Next Generation Timescape

Network

Paramount

Air Date

1987-1994

Predecessor

Star Trek: The Original Series

Main Cast

Patrick Stewart, LeVar Burton, Jonathan Frakes, Denise Crosby, Brent Spiner, Marina Sirtis, Michael Dorn, Gates McFadden

The original Star Trek series aired from 1966 to 1969, but spawned a media franchise that has continues into the present day. The Next Generation, which premiered two decades later in 1987, was somewhat of a return to form for the franchise, after expanding into an animated series and (at that point) four feature films, but was set a century after the first series’ events.

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While it’s a sequel in terms of its place in the Star Trek timeline, The Next Generation does have its ties to The Original Series. Several episodes, like “The Naked Now,” directly reference specific events from Star Trek: The Original Series, and DeForest Kelley even guest starred as Leonard McCoy in the very first episode of TNG.

4

Cobra Kai

For A New Generation Of Karate Kids

Cobra Kai Season 5 Daniel LaRusso Chozen

Network

YouTube Premium/Netflix

Air Date

2018-present

Predecessor

The Karate Kid (1984)

Main Cast

Ralph Macchio, William Zabka, Courtney Henggeler, Tanner Buchanan, Xolo Mariduena, Mary Mouser

The Karate Kid is one of the most iconic films of the 1980s, starring Ralph Macchio as a teen who is taught karate to deal with bullies. The drama series Cobra Kai, which debuted in 2018, was meant as a follow-up to that original film, with Macchio reprising his role as Daniel LaRusso and William Zabka returning as Johnny Lawrence, the film’s villain.

Cobra Kai mainly centers on a down-on-his-luck Lawrence, who agrees to teach karate to a bullied teenager, which spirals into a re-opening of the titular dojo. It’s a fascinating look at what happened to these characters thirty years after the events of the film, and is even more adult in how it handles topics of aging, success, and grief.

3

The Legend Of Korra

The World Of Avatar Expanded

Avatar korra standing by the river suited in her water tribe uniform.

Network

Nickelodeon

Air Date

2012-2014

Predecessor

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Main Cast

Janet Varney, Seychelle Gabriel, David Faustino, P.J. Byrne, J.K. Simmons, Kiernan Shipka, Mindy Sterling, Dee Bradley Baker

Avatar: The Last Airbender is admittedly a tough act to follow, though it couldn’t have been done better than The Legend of Korra. The sequel series follows Korra, the reincarnation of Aang, who seeks to learn airbending to follow in the ways of the former Avatar. Along the way, Korra faces political upheaval and mysterious powers let loose upon the world.

The series was especially notable for its handling of real-world issues like terrorism and LGBTQ+ difficulties, making it a much more modern interpretation of Avatar: The Last Airbender. While the four seasons are amazing enough, the story continues on with a comic book series that’s been published since 2017, three years after the sequel series ended.

2

Frasier

A Regular From Cheers Made It Big

Frasier Crane on the mic at KACL

Network

NBC

Air Date

1993-2004

Predecessor

Cheers

Main Cast

Kelsey Grammar, David Hyde Pierce, Jane Leeves, Peri Gilpin, John Mahoney

It’s rare to find a sequel series that’s somehow more popular than the original. That’s certainly the case for Frasier, the sequel spin-off of NBC’s Cheers, which centered around the workers and regulars at the titular Boston bar. Frasier, which premiered the same year Cheers ended, follows the life of Kelsey Grammar’s character, Frasier Crane.

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In Frasier, Grammar’s titular character moves from Boston to Seattle, taking up a job as a psychiatry radio show host and feuding with his equally-intelligent brother, Niles. The show’s original Emmy-winning run lasted for eleven seasons, and was recently revived for a twelfth and thirteenth in 2023 for Paramount+, albeit this revival was reviewed unfavorably when compared to the original.

1

Better Call Saul

The Backstory Of One Slimy Lawyer Changes Breaking Bad

kim-and-jimmy-better-call-saul

Network

AMC

Air Date

2015-2022

Predecessor

Breaking Bad

Main Cast

Bob Odenkirk, Rhea Seehorn, Jonathan Banks, Patrick Fabian, Michael Mando, Michael McKean, Giancarlo Esposito, Tony Dalton

Breaking Bad is widely regarded as one of the best television shows of all time, so it was right to be skeptical they could follow it up with a prequel centered on Bob Odenkirk’s sleazy criminal lawyer, Saul Goodman. What Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould produced instead was a worthy prequel to the original series that completely flips the original show on its head.

Better Call Saul primarily tracks the transformation of Jimmy McGill into the heartless Saul Goodman prior to the events of Breaking Bad, but also dives into the aftermath of Saul’s escape from captivity at the end of the original show. However, this show’s greatest magic trick is investing viewers in its new characters, including the standouts Kim Wexler and Howard Hamlin.

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