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If a trilogy was later expanded, it still counted. For instance, with the rebooted Planet of the Apes trilogy, we ended up getting Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, and it did pick the narrative up after Ceasar’s story, but in that lies the point. The trilogy is the beginning, middle, and end of Caesar’s story. The following examples, including that one, are also overall successful beginnings, middles, and ends of stories worth telling.
10) Planet of the Apes Reboot Trilogy

It seems that a lot of the best trilogies peak with the second installment, and the rebooted Planet of the Apes trilogy is no exception. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes is one of the absolute best blockbuster films of the 2010s. Fortunately, the two movies that surround it are solid, too.
But for all of Dawn‘s brilliant social commentary and gorgeous cinematography, not to mention Matt Reeves’ direction of both it and War for the Planet of the Apes, what makes the trilogy soar is Andy Serkis’ work as Caesar. It’s right up there with The Lord of the Rings‘ Gollum.
Stream the entire rebooted Planet of the Apes trilogy on Hulu (which is being phased out, at which point they will be on Disney+).
9) Back to the Future

There is an argument to be made that Back to the Future shouldn’t be here. After all, it’s a case of the first one absolutely being the best one. But let’s face it, it’s not as if the sequels are of poor quality. They’re just not “as good.” Back to the Future Part II has a future Biff that feels super relevant these days and Back to the Future Part III comes across as the most heartfelt of the trio.
Furthermore, it all feels very full circle. Even though we’re going to different time periods the movies manage to incorporate the same characters and end up at the same place: Marty McFly’s house in 1985. Some might argue that bringing the same characters in amounts to nothing more than a rehash, but when you have so many cases of perfect casting, you make the most of their presence and talent.
8) The Dark Knight Trilogy

Going for a more grounded approach has become a recurring tactic in the superhero subgenre, but when Christopher Nolan did it with his The Dark Knight trilogy it was quite fresh, and quite effective. They were superhero movies that could be taken seriously even by those who didn’t take to them easily.
As we all know, it was a trilogy that peaked with its middle installment, but the movie that opened this era of Batman movie history was also extremely important in its own right. Batman Begins was Nolan’s first time working on a blockbuster, it greatly expanded the profiles of Christian Bale and Cillian Murphy, and introduced an iconic score by Hans Zimmer and James Newton Howard into the annals of Hollywood movie music history. The Dark Knight Rises is inferior to the two movies that precede it, and it plods in sections, but it too is an ambitious work with standout elements such as Anne Hathaway’s performance and a large scope.
Stream The Dark Knight Trilogy on HBO Max.
7) Dollars Trilogy

It’s hard to argue that a trilogy that only gets better the further it goes along doesn’t qualify as one of the best. That is exactly the case with Sergio Leone’s Dollars Trilogy.
These were the movies that put spaghetti Westerns on the map and established Clint Eastwood as a worldwide movie star after his time on the small screen’s Rawhide. And as far as The Good, the Bad and the Ugly went, it both introduced the world to Ennio Morricone’s all-timer of a score and gave Lee Van Cleef the best role of his career as Angel Eyes (he also was in For a Few Dollars More, though he played a different character).
Stream the Dollars Trilogy on Prime Video.
6) Captain America

Calling Captain America: The First Avenger the best Marvel Cinematic Universe film is a hill worth dying on. It’s only gotten better since its 2011 release, partly because it doesn’t 100% feel like the rest of the MCU, it more functions as a throwback to the serials of the ’30s which was, of course, director Joe Johnston’s goal (one need only look at his The Rocketeer for further proof that he’s really great at going retro).
But then The First Avenger was followed by two films that are excellent in their own right. Captain America: The Winter Soldier is a brilliant MCU take on political thrillers that is also a high ranker in the overarching universe while Captain America: Civil War continues with the tone Winter Soldier set and rarely feels overstuffed, which was the major risk. Even with Tony Stark and Hawkeye and Ant-Man et al. thrown in the mix it doesn’t forget to keep its eye mostly on Steve Rogers. This is the MCU’s definitive trilogy, though Guardians of the Galaxy is also a knock-out.
Stream the entire Captain America trilogy on Disney+.













