Real talk: 'Dogma' sequels are unlikely but not impossible. The film’s cult status means streaming services occasionally flirt with the idea—Netflix considered an interactive special in 2020. Rights issues are messy, but Hollywood’s reboot obsession could eventually override them. Smith’s playful attitude helps; he once joked about crowdfunding a sequel called 'Dogma 2: Eternal Damnation'. For now, enjoy the Blu-ray extras and Jay’s cameos in other View Askewniverse projects.
As a longtime fan of 'Dogma', I've dug deep into this topic. Kevin Smith's cult classic has no official sequels or adaptations in development, despite persistent rumors. Smith himself has stated that rights issues with Miramax make it legally tricky. The original script was part of his 'View Askewniverse', but later films like 'Jay and Silent Bob Reboot' only reference it indirectly.
There's always fan demand for more, especially with the original cast's chemistry. Some online petitions exist, but Hollywood realities make it unlikely. Smith occasionally teases ideas at Q&As—like a potential animated series to bypass rights hurdles—but nothing concrete. The closest we got was a comic book continuation in 2000. For now, 'Dogma' remains a standalone gem in Smith's filmography, though its themes still spark debates about religion and modernity.
From a film industry perspective, 'Dogma' sequel talks have been stuck in development limbo for decades. Rights ownership is split between Harvey Weinstein (who retains veto power) and Disney after their Miramax acquisition. Legal experts say untangling this would require unprecedented negotiations. The original cast’s aging also complicates direct sequels. Smith explored spin-offs like a Loki-centric series, but streaming platforms hesitated due to the film’s controversial religious satire. Current trends favor reboots over risky continuations of 90s films.
I rewatched 'Dogma' last week and researched this. No sequels exist, but there’s cool unofficial content. Kevin Smith’s podcast mentions scrapped ideas—like a Broadway musical adaptation or a meta sequel where characters debate whether to make one. The film’s legacy lives through memes and academic papers analyzing its theology. Merch like Bartleby’s wings or Jay’s hockey jersey still sell at conventions, keeping fan hopes alive for some form of revival.
Here’s the scoop: while Kevin Smith loves revisiting his classics, 'Dogma' is legally landlocked. The script’s religious parody makes studios wary, and Ben Affleck’s current superhero commitments rule out returns as Bartleby. Fan theories suggest loopholes—like setting a sequel in Hell or focusing on new angels. Smith’s recent focus has been on 'Masters of the Universe' and 'Clerks III', but he’s hinted that if Matt Damon and Chris Rock were game, he’d find a way. Until then, we’ve got the original’s sharp wit.
2025-06-25 20:28:47
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Okay, here's the short-but-meaty version from me as someone who loves poking through film trivia: if you mean Kevin Smith's 1999 movie 'Dogma', that film was an original screenplay—it's not adapted from a preexisting novel. I love how blasphemous and witty it is: Bartleby and Loki (played by Ben Affleck and Matt Damon) are fallen angels, Alan Rickman and Salma Hayek give the movie its weirdly warm gravitas, and George Carlin's Cardinal character adds a surreal, sharp edge. The film stirred up a lot of controversy when it came out, which only made it more talked-about in the circles I hang out in.
On the other hand, there are plenty of books titled 'Dogma' by various authors, and one title doesn't mean a single source to check against every movie. So if you were thinking of a specific book named 'Dogma'—tell me the author and I'll dig in. For casual browsing, though, start with the movie's Wikipedia or IMDb page: the screenplay credit goes to Kevin Smith, which usually signals it wasn't adapted from a novel. I kind of love tracing these things, so if you want I can look up a particular book and see if it ever got optioned or adapted.
Hmm — the thing with 'Dogma' is that it isn't a single, uniquely identifiable book title, so the sequel/prequel situation depends on which 'Dogma' you mean.
If you meant the novel 'Dogma' by Lars Iyer, then yes: it sits in a loose sequence with other books by the same author — people commonly read it alongside 'Spurious' and 'Excess' as companion pieces that share themes and a certain voice. If instead you were thinking of Kevin Smith's 'Dogma' (which is a film from 1999 rather than a traditional novel), there isn’t an official novel sequel, but the characters and tone reappear across Smith’s universe in other films and comic projects, so you get a kind of cinematic/comics continuity rather than a straight book sequel. Beyond those, there are multiple unrelated books titled 'Dogma' by different writers, and some are standalone.
If you tell me the author or share the edition/cover you have, I can be more precise about whether there’s a direct prequel or sequel connected to that exact 'Dogma'. I can also show where to look up ISBNs and publisher pages if you want to dig deeper.