When he's not actively begging Dwayne Johnson to return to the Fast & Furious franchise when it was his fault that the longtime Luke Hobbs ended his association with the property in the first place, Vin Diesel likes to tease all sorts of sequels on social media, regardless of if we want them or not.
Sony are very low on marketable franchises that don't involve Spider-Man, with Jumanji the only other brand property that instantly comes to mind, so it's little wonder that the studio is hedging its bets so heavily on the web-slinging superhero.
Longtime fans of the franchise have been waiting 32 years to see it, so expectations are very high heading into Friday's release of Ghostbusters: Afterlife, the hybrid of sequel and reboot that doubles down on nostalgia to deliver the movie people have been asking of the supernatural comedy series since Ivan Reitman's Ghostbusters II.