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‘Crazy Rich Asians 2’ …& 3??

I know I’m crazy late to game, but I FINALLY watched Crazy Rich Asians on the flight home today. I’ve gotten into this bad habit of putting off seeing a film that is an adaptation of a book, aiming to read the book first, ordering the book (in this case, the trilogy) and never actually starting it… until I find myself months later finally seeing the film because I’m annoyed I’m missing out- and then starting the book because I loved the movie so much. Well, I’m there now.

I finished Crazy Rich Asians and immediately thought- there has to be a sequel in the works! I started looking into it right away- turns out- CRA is not just getting a sequel, it’s getting two!

Now that you’re excited- that’s the good news. The not-so-good news is that the second Crazy Rich Asians movie won’t even start filming until 2020.

It seems Crazy Rich Asians director Jon Chu is already set to direct the film adaptation Lin-Manuel Miranda's Tony-winning musical In the Heights.

I promise it will be worth the wait to keep Jon Chu and his vision at the helm of the CRA franchise. At least the movie's producer, Nina Jacobson, confirmed that the sequels will shoot back-to-back to minimize the time between Crazy Rich Asians 2 and 3.

“We’ll make it up to [fans] on the back end," she explained, "by shooting two films together."

Cast: 

The plan appears to be to reunite the entire Crazy Rich Asians team for the sequels. In August, The Hollywood Reporter reported that producers Nina Jacobson and Brad Simpson of Color Force and John Penotti of Ivanhoe, respectively, were set to return, as was director Jon Chu and screenwriters Peter Chiarelli and Adele Lim (who are currently work on the sequel's script, according to Deadline). 

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While there haven't been official casting announcements yet, it's safe to assume that the entire cast of the first movie (all of whom reportedly have options for a sequel in their contracts) will return, as long as there's a need for their characters in the sequels' stories. 

Henry Golding, who plays swoon-worthy leading man Nick Young in the movie, has already gone on the record as saying he's down for sequels. 

"I hope there’s something in the future," he told THR in August. "It would be so much fun to get everybody back together, back to sweaty old Singapore."

Plot: 

The filmmakers won't have to start from scratch when it comes to plotting the sequels. Crazy Rich Asians is based on a book which is itself part of a trilogy and before CRA even opened, Warner Bros. already had the option for author Kevin Kwan’s entire trilogy. The second and third books in the trilogy are called China Rich Girlfriendand Rich People Problems, respectively. 

"We have a plan with Kevin for the next two films,” producer Brad Simpson told The Hollywood Reporterback in August, just after Crazy Rich Asians opened and was clearly headed for massive success.

The movie's mid-credits scene teased the plot of the sequel, with fan favorite (and newly-single) Astrid making eyes at and dancing with the very handsome Charlie Wu (played by Gleealum Harry Shum, Jr.)—who fans of the Crazy Rich Asians books know as her first love.

Expect Astrid and Charlie's second-chance-at-love story to take centerstage in the sequel. 

"The idea is to tell the story [of Astrid and Charlie] in the next movie,” Chu explained to THR. "I made a promise to Harry, so I’m going to do it." 

One of the biggest reveals in Crazy Rich Asians was that Rachel's father was not dead, as she believed her whole life, but back in China, where her mother had left him when she fled to the United States for a fresh start. In the second book in the series, China Rich Girlfriend, Rachel and Nick travel to China to search for her estranged father—but it's not clear if this plot line will make it into the film adaptation, largely because it's not clear if the Chinese government will cooperate with the sequel. The first movie wasn't released in China until November 30, 2018 (more than three months after its US premiere) and it flopped in the Chinese box office. What's more, the Chinese translation of the 2013 novel was only made available in the country this year, according to THR

China Rich Girlfriend also features a lot more of Kitty Pong—you know, the gold-digging actress who dumps Alistair for Bernard Tai at the end of the first movie. 

"We needed to hire somebody who can really act, because in time she becomes much more significant," Chu, who has clearly been planning on a sequel since day one, said of the character. "I think she’s scared that we’re never going to make that one, but we are. I’ll make it happen."

Luke Perry’s Final Days

Luke Perry '90210' marathon on Pop TV this weekend!!

Luke Perry '90210' marathon on Pop TV this weekend!!

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