[2017 interview, on T2 Trainspotting (2017)] Normally a sequel you do quite quickly. If you've had a hit, there's a kind of pressure to do another one quite quickly - a commercial pressure. I don't remember that at the time, and I think none of us would have entertained it anyway; we didn't really want to do anything like that. But then Irvine (Welsh) published this book, Porno, after about seven years - it was a sort of a 10-years-later catch-up, and we obviously considered it then and John Hodge who wrote the screenplay for the first film, did a very decent job adapting it, very professional, and we all looked at it and thought, "It's not good enough", including John. And I realise now why, because when we went back for the last time two years ago to see if we could produce something for the 20th anniversary, he went away and he wrote something much more personal and quite painful in certain respects about himself and about us as well, about the aging process and you taking account, taking stock really. When he sent it to me, I just sent it straight to the actors because I knew they'd do it because it was valuable and personal, it had something to say - it wasn't just a rehash or a pastiche or a replica, it was something that had its own integrity, though it does speak to the other film, they do talk to each other in a way, but not as a traditional sequel might do.
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