Priest defuses the situation and persuades Scatter to help them, although Scatter warns that it will be the last time. Eddie threatens Scatter, demanding that he reveal his source if he will not supply them, but Scatter holds him at gunpoint. Scatter initially refuses to help Priest. Eddie argues that crime is the only option left to them by "The Man." That night, Eddie and Priest approach Scatter, a retired dealer who started Priest in the business. With such a big score, they can retire comfortably. Priest discusses his plan to buy thirty kilos of high-quality cocaine with the $300,000 he and his partner Eddie have, which they can sell for $1,000,000 within four months. Although the timid Freddie abhors violence, he agrees and accompanies another member of Priest's "family" of lower-level dealers to commit the robbery. One day, Priest confronts Fat Freddie, one of his dealers, about money that Freddie owes and threatens to force Freddie's wife into prostitution unless he robs a competitor. He yearns to go straight, despite the fortune he makes. Youngblood Priest (Ron O'Neal), an African-American cocaine dealer, enjoys a luxurious lifestyle in Harlem. Producer Sig Shore directed a second sequel, The Return of Superfly, released in 1990, with Nathan Purdee as Priest. O'Neal reprised his role as Youngblood Priest in the 1973 film Super Fly T.N.T., which he also directed. The film is well known for its soundtrack, written and produced by soul musician Curtis Mayfield. and starring Ron O'Neal as Youngblood Priest, an African American cocaine dealer who is trying to quit the underworld drug business. Super Fly is a 1972 American blaxploitation neo-noir crime drama film directed by Gordon Parks Jr.