No on the sequel.
The first word that came to mind when I walked out of the theater was "disapointing". I saw the same look on people who walked out of the previous showing while in line. It was a complete dud. I'm sure the 20-year olds who trampled over one another to see the silly "Battleship" and "Transformer" movies loved it, but not me. It was a complete waste of energy and technical expertise. It never connected emotionally -- and what could anybody expect, since Lindelof wrote the story in 2 WEEKS. That's the problem with all these inferior movies nowadays. Too much emphasis on CGI and mindless action and not enough time spent on story, plot and character development. If you don't connect the audience emotionally, you fail. It's that simple.
The movie left way to many unanswered questions. Including: Why did these "Engineers" hate the humans they supposedly created? And how was Shaw going to survive on an alien spacecraft with no food or water? Also, how did the alien ship take off with no apparent propulsion equipment or fuel stores, and why didn't it break apart when it crashed on the planet? The blastoff of the ship sadly resembled the same scenes in the endings of the last "Indiana Jones" and first "X-Files" movies. They can do better. They're were also many biological problems with the story. Like the co-joining of alien DNA with human DNA, as well as the accellerating macro-evolution of the new species. Those scenes of the pregnancy we're copied from the old 1980's TV series "V", where one of the visitors had sex with a human girl. How pathetic.
I will never add this to my collection of over 2000 films in my library, nor do I ever desire seeing it again -- just like "Alien Resurrection".
Overall, the production design was excellent as is usually the case, but the story was unsuspensful and lame. I gave the movie a "GENEROUS" B-. It was pretty bad for a high concept (epic) production.
Please don't make a sequel. "Prometheus" and "Super 8" were too much for me.