4 Movie Characters Killed Before the Sequel

Will Smith's Col. Hiller is killed off before "Independence Day: Resurgence."

— -- Hollywood is usually reluctant to kill off major characters in films, especially if there's a chance of a sequel.

On a promotional website for the sequel, a fake news headline from 2007 reads, "Alien Tech Malfunction Kills Col. Hiller."

It came as shocking news to fans who were hoping Smith would reprise his role. Even the star himself was sad to learn of his character's fate.

"The trailer looks really cool. I'm going to be sitting around with tears in my eyes when that one comes out," he told Yahoo! Movies. "It was terrible when I found out my character died."

Even though Smith said he "had talked" to "Independence Day" director Roland Emmerich about returning for the sequel, the two apparently couldn't come to an agreement.

Emmerich told the New York Daily News in a July 2013 interview, "Will Smith can not come back because he's too expensive, but he'd also be too much of a marquee name. It would be too much. We have like maybe half of the people that you know would know from the first film and the other half people who are new."

Hiller may be the first character killed off between films, but he's not the first to die before a sequel. Of course, this being a Hollywood, a character's death is not always final either.

Take a look at these others and beware, there are spoilers ahead:

Grace Augustine

Augustine won't be the only character returning from the dead. Stephen Lang is also expected to be back as villain Colonel Quaritch, despite ending the first film with two Na'avi arrows through his chest.

Dwayne Hicks

Weaver's co-star from her other successful franchise, "Alien," Corporal Dwayne Hicks, played by Michael Biehn, bit the dust at the beginning of "Aliens 3" when the escape ship carrying him, Ripley and Newt crashes and Ripley is the only survivor. But the director of the fifth installment, Neill Blomkamp, has hinted that Hicks could be back. Blomkamp considers his film to be the sequel to James Cameron’s 1986 classic "Aliens," which would place it as the third movie in the franchise, leaving room for Hicks to still be alive.

Mufasa