Gone in 60 Seconds 2 remains an elusive and tragic chapter in automotive cinema, forever frozen in time. The original cult classic, released in 1974, was a raw, adrenaline‑fueled vehicle heist movie crafted by H. B. “Toby” Halicki, who wrote, directed, starred in, and performed stunts for the film. Riding the wave of its gritty realism and extraordinary car chases, Halicki endeavored to create a follow‑up that would push boundaries further—and thus Gone in 60 Seconds 2 began production in 1989.

Tragedy struck during the filming of the sequel. Halicki had planned a monumental stunt sequence involving a collapsing 160‑foot water tower, filmed in Dunkirk and Buffalo, New York. When the rigging failed, the tower fell unexpectedly, striking and killing Halicki instantly—a devastating event that halted the production forever.
Despite the abrupt end, Halicki’s vision for the sequel left a tangible legacy. In 2003, a fragment of the unfinished film was released as a roughly 30‑ to 33‑minute short on the DVD of Deadline Auto Theft, the third installment in Halicki’s unofficial car‑chase trilogy. This fragment includes raw footage of wild stunts—most notably a chase involving a custom “Slicer” vehicle capable of flipping other cars—that hints at what the full sequel might have unleashed.
The surviving footage paints a vivid picture: Halicki had destroyed over 400 cars in pursuit of cinematic chaos, with epic sequences featuring semi‑truck chases and mayhem that tore through cityscapes. It’s a testament to his vision as the “Car‑Crash‑King,” capturing the raw destruction that defined his filmmaking ethos.

Over the years, fans have pieced together this unfinished sequel, and though its narrative coherence is minimal—there’s dialogue, plan fragments, and a relentless vehicle spectacle—its existence keeps Halicki’s audacious ambition alive. As one fan put it, it’s a “collection of car scenes intercut with the occasional dialogue,” with a relentless 40‑minute chase dominating the latter half.
In the realm of online rumor, some viral hoaxes have tried to resurrect a modern Nic Cage sequel—dubbed Gone in 60 Nanoseconds—set for release in 2025. But this is purely fan‑made satire, with no basis in reality. There’s no official sequel in the works, and these claims have been widely debunked by fact‑checkers .
Ultimately, Gone in 60 Seconds 2 remains what it always was: an unfinished fever dream of vehicular carnage, halted by tragedy. The snippets that exist serve as both a symbol of Halicki’s fearless creativity and a haunting “what‑could‑have‑been” in the annals of action cinema.





