<span>W</span><span>hen director M Night Shyamalan decided to make a sequel to his 2000 superhero thriller </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span>, he knew one cast member would definitely be on board. Samuel L Jackson has spent the past two decades pestering Shyamalan about a follow-up, even stopping </span><span><em>The Sixth Sense</em></span><span> director in Los Angeles traffic to yell: "When we doing the sequel</span><span>?"</span> <span>"I needed the cheque, I was broke," Samuel L Jackson </span><span>said in London. "He [Shyamalan] promised us a sequel. When we did </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span> he said this [is] part of a trilogy and then nothing happened."</span> <span>While the financial incentive might have been a motivating factor, Jackson's continued commitment to reprising his role as villain Elijah Price in </span><span><em>Glass </em></span><span>came from his desire to give the character "closure". "I knew he [Elijah] had been locked up in that institution," he said. "It was a matter of figuring out what was going on while he was in there, what they were doing to him and how he was manipulating them."</span> <span>Revealing Elijah Price</span><span> as the criminal mastermind behind the train crash which gave David Dunn (played by Bruce Willis) his superhuman powers was the big twist at the end of </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span>. But arguably an even bigger twist was to come in the second film in the trilogy, </span><span><em>Split</em></span><span>, which was released in 2016. Starring James McAvoy as Kevin Wendell Crumb, aka "The Horde", a man with 23 different personalities and a penchant for kidnapping teenage girls, </span><span><em>Split</em></span><span> was never marketed as a sequel to </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span>. It wasn't until the final scene when Willis appears in an uncredited cameo that fans realised it was a follow-up.</span> <span>Shyamalan invited Jackson to see a screening of </span><span><em>Split</em></span><span>, which at the end includes a reference to Mr Glass, the nickname of his character Elijah in </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span>. "Sam came out and asked me 'what does this mean?'" said Shyamalan. "And I replied 'we're making the movie'."</span> <span>In </span><span><em>Glass, </em></span><span>all three main characters (The Horde, Elijah and David) end up at Raven Hill Memorial Institution under the care of psychiatrist Dr Ellie Staple, played by Sarah Paulson.</span> <span>Paulson, who shot to fame in Ryan Murphy's </span><span><em>American Horror Story</em></span><span>, jumped at the chance to work with Shyamalan. A huge fan of his previous work, </span><span>she didn't even read the script before accepting, instead saying yes after Shyamalan described the role. Luckily Murphy, who Paulson credits </span><span>for her astronomical rise over the past seven years, allowed her time off from projects </span><span>to work on </span><span><em>Glass</em></span><span>. "I'm very lucky with Ryan in that he lets me out to work with other people," she laughed.</span> <span>McAvoy too was happy to reprise his role (or roles), and this time </span><span>was more prepared for Shyamalan's uncompromising directing style. "Night has got a pretty specific way of working," McAvoy said. "He is really prepared and has a strong point of view of what he wants. So even if you disagree it's easier to get going."</span> <span>Shyamalan is </span><span>adamant that the long-awaited </span><span><em>Glass</em></span><span> will be the final instalment in the film series. "I have no interest in making the same movie again and again and again," the director said</span><span>. There are high expectations for the film's release </span><span>as </span><span><em>Unbreakable</em></span><span> is considered a cult classic among superhero movie fans.</span> _______________ <strong>Read more:</strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/roma-actresses-drew-on-personal-lives-for-inspiration-1.812558">'Roma' actresses drew on personal lives for inspiration</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/12-films-to-look-forward-to-in-2019-1.810004">12 films to look forward to in 2019</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/clint-eastwood-after-seven-decades-in-the-saddle-is-this-his-last-ride-1.811315">Clint Eastwood: after seven decades in the saddle, is this his last ride?</a></strong> _______________ <span>Now regarded as one of Shyamalan's best films, </span><span><em>Unbreakable's</em></span><span> release 19 years ago garnered mixed reviews. The director </span><span>wanted to promote the film as a comic book movie but was told by studio directors that this would attract a niche audience. Instead its portrayal as a psychological thriller led to unhelpful comparisons with his 1999 hit </span><span><em>The Sixth Sense,</em></span><span> leaving reviewers disappointed.</span> <span>The initial reaction weighed </span><span>so much on Shyamalan</span><span> that it took him almost two decades to make a sequel. "Why did it bother me so much that it took me 15 years to come back to it?" he said. "It was because I was so hurt by their not understanding the thing I was trying to do. It was about me becoming OK with myself."</span> <em>Glass is in cinemas across the UAE from January 17</em>