If Three Meters Above The Sky 3 were to exist, it would not rely on the shock of the new. Instead, it would deepen the emotional register into three distinct, mature feelings.
To understand where Emotions and Dreams must go, we must remember where we have been.
But any true trilogy needs a third act. Not of conflict, but of transformation. Emotions and Dreams would not be about falling in love again—it would be about staying in love with life.
Post 1: The Comparison (Emotions)
Post 2: The Dream Blueprint (Dreams)
Post 3: Dialogue Teaser
Post 4: The Letter
In the first film, the "three meters" represented rebellion. It was that dangerous, intoxicating feeling of being above the world, untouchable. In the second, it represented longing—the pain of looking up at a height you can no longer reach.
For a third installment, the emotion must shift to acceptance. Three Meters Above The Sky 3 Emotions And Dreams
Step (Hache) is no longer the angry boy throwing punches. Babi is no longer the sheltered rich girl. If Emotions and Dreams happens, we need to see them as adults. The emotion here isn't just puppy love or jealous rage; it is the quiet terror of seeing the person who broke you standing right in front of you when you have everything to lose.
The real emotion of a third movie is nostalgia mixed with fear—the fear that the dream you’ve held onto for a decade might actually come true, and you might not be ready for it.
A theoretical Three Meters Above The Sky 3 would require a radical shift in visual storytelling.
Ten years after the races ended, Hache and Babi live in separate worlds. He is a retired mechanic fighting for custody of his eight-year-old daughter, a quiet girl who has never seen his rebellious side. She is a celebrated architect in Madrid, engaged to a safe, predictable man. If Three Meters Above The Sky 3 were
When a devastating storm destroys the old "Three Meters" racetrack—their only sacred ground—they are forced to reunite to save it from becoming a parking lot. Old scars reopen. But this time, the enemy isn't each other. It is time, fear, and the dreams they buried alive.
Babi discovers that Hache never stopped writing her letters he never sent. Hache discovers Babi still sketches his eyes in the margins of her blueprints. To win back their future, they must first forgive the ghosts of their past.
In Emotions and Dreams, Babi is an architect or a space designer. Her dream is physical: to build a public rooftop garden—three meters above street level—where strangers can sit and feel something other than loneliness. She realizes that the “three meters” was never only about Star; it was about elevation. A new perspective.