After Sam Mendes’ breakout hit American Beauty, he went on to direct Road to Perdition and Jarhead, two expensive critical darlings that failed to live up to box office expectations (/Film readers will know that Mendes is currently attached to helm Preacher).  In particular, Perdition, which at the time was one of Tom Hanks’ few starring roles as an ostensible “bad guy,” is regarded in some circles as a beautiful and criminally underappreciated film. It now seems as though that world will be brought back to life again by the one who first created it.

Max Allan Collins, the man behind the original series of Road to Perdition comics, has been tapped to write and direct two sequels to Perdition, called Road to Purgatory and Road to Paradise, for JBM Productions (which has produced films as Leprecaun and Angel Eyes) and EMO Films.  According to the press release:

Road to Purgatory will follow the character of Michael Sullivan, Jr., the son of Tom Hanks’ character in the original film, who returns from World War II with a new determination to avenge his murdered father. His quest ultimately leads him to Frank Nitti, whom he is urged to kill on the orders of Al Capone. The second sequel will follow Sullivan’s continued plight.

Collins’ IMDB resume primarily consists of some small films, and writing credits on a few high-profile television shows. Road to Purgatory will be dedicated to Paul Newman.

The Capone era is unquestionably the most interesting in the realm of modern crime, with a sprawl of tangled loyalties and political connections. Any book, film, or television show that continues to mine this period for material is already starting off at an interesting place and has the potential to be enthralling. Whether or not these follow-up films will live up to that, or even to the first Mendes film, remains to be seen.

via Cinematical

Discuss: Would you look forward to a Road to Perdition sequel? What are your thoughts on the first film?

  • galdersorg
    I absolutely loved the first film as well as the comics. I have read both of the sequels and they are just as good as the first. Max knows how to write Crime on a grand yet subdued scale.
  • orange cinema
    love the book and the film. i'm glad to hear it sounds like a 'true sequel' that we have been talking about recently on these boards. i'm a stickler for continuity, so i hope to see the same kid playing mike s jr. if allen can capture mendes beautiful mood/take on this era, so that the sequels seem seamless, then i'm all in. never ever thought this would become a trilogy, but i'm in.

    i am curious what they'll do so it doesn't become another revenge journey, which is exactly what the first one was - but it worked because of the humor, the impending doom, the innocence, the urgency, the performances, the story, the story, the story...hell this one just worked.
  • j
    Yeah I loved Road to Perdition and I think its criminally underrated. I dont think it needs any sequels.
  • How ridiculously cool. "Road to Perdition" is one of my favorite films, and the subsequent tales Collins wrote weren't bad at all. If he can continue the style and look of the first film, I'm on board. He may even find a way to sneak Eliot Ness back into the fray, who Collins is very fond of, and was left out of the film version of "Perdition."

    Now, where do I sign up to be a PA?
  • Considering how old the main character is, it might be cool to have Colin Hanks in the lead.
  • Filmfan.
    I totally agree that this would be interesting since the first film was great. Having only watched Perdition the other day it is still very fresh in my mind. Was it only me who thought Daniel Craig's performance was really quite bad. The accent was dire. Im a fan of his and still am but WOW he couldnt pull it off. HOWEVER, it was enjoyable and beautifuly shot.
  • ANGRY BROOMSTICK
    that's really dumb. It's rare for "classy serious" movies to get sequels.

    geez, let's make a sequel to No Country for Old Men or There Will be Blood!!!!

    DO NOT ATTEMPT A GODFATHER 3!!!!
  • Since these are based on Graphic Novels, I think sequels would be cool if done with the same tone as the first movie.

    I loved Road to Perdition and would love to see the continutation of this story.
  • Captain Awesome
    I loved Road to Perdition. But this is a stupid idea. I don't need to see what happens next.

    It will only lesson the impact of the first film's ending. Why the fuck do people insist on trying to expand on something that was executed so well already?

    Films like this are being turned into cheap syndicated tv series.
  • I saw "Road to Perdition". I loved it. Sam Mendes knows how to thrill his audiences with an unconventional story about people. Sometimes it was tough to watch the violent scenes.

    The camerawork was brillant. People should see the movie. I wanna see the sequels, too.
  • IG
    Boo!

    First seeing the headline I thought... why not?

    BUT, didn't the narration at the end of the film say he never held a gun again?
  • MovieBuff
    Road to Perdition is one of my favorite movies. It is extremely underrated.

    I mean freakin' School of Rock was on the Empire 500 Movie List, but Road to Perdition wasn't.

    Not so sure about a sequel though.
  • honavery
    I loved RTP also...the score is one of my favorite movie scores ever. I love the shots of old Chicago in that one too.

    Dunno about a sequel though.
  • Bobcat
    I'm confused on one thing... the graphic novels were a trilogy... was the film Road to Perdition based only on the first of the three (and then the movie sequels would be based on the second and third novels)? Or was the original film based on the totality of all three (and the movie sequels would be based on new plots separate from the novels)??

    Thanks.
  • Ghost
    I'd be interested in seeing this actually. It could be promising.
  • Ayz
    I'm confused.

    Wasn't the whole point of the first film that his son didn't turn out like him in the end? Doing another one where the kids out for revenge seems to belittle that whole journey of the original movie.

    While I'd love to see more of this world -- stuff like this is just annoying. "Hey lets start off making a sequel by insulting everyone who was moved by the first film!"

    Great idea.
  • spikeshinizle
    I totally agree with you Ayz, this new plot seems to take away everything that was different about Michaels character. The ending of the RTP was quite moving because of the way his father finally realized what it was that made them so different (yet in a way, so much alike).

    Road to Perdition is one of the most beautifully shot films ever created, in my opinion (not to mention the score, the performances and the freaking awesome pacing of the story, it takes its time and savors the little moments). I only hope these sequels don't ruin the world as its been established....then again, if the creator is at the helm, I guess it can't turn out too bad.
  • Dav
    Road to Perdition actually performed quite well at the Box Office with over 100 M domestically.
  • Sounds like a great idea actually. I thought the first one was completely underrated. Tom Hanks as a "bad" guy, Paul Newman, Daniel Craig, even Jude Law was good. I just hope they make a great story around the setting.
  • @Dav

    True, but its budget according to BOMojo was $80 million, not including marketing costs. Jarhead fared even worse.
  • ryan t
    Yea, I agree with Ayz too. These next 2 installments kind of negate the whole point of the first film.
  • Goro
    Thought ROAD TO PERDITION was ok, if a bit too precious. For a LONE WOLF AND CUB remake, it was very bad, though.
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