Not exact matches
The inclusion
of an absurd yet thoroughly captivating celebrity cameo, which essentially stands as a high point within the
entire series, perpetuates Night at the Museum: Secret
of the Tomb's better - than - expected third - act atmosphere, although, unfortunately, director Shawn Levy ensures that the
film concludes with a whimper by offering up an excessively sappy final stretch that just goes on and on - with this underwhelming
climax confirming the movie's place as an almost passable concluding entry in a seriously forgettable trilogy.
Only at the
climax of the
film is the
entire theme heard and resolved in its original key.
In lieu
of providing spoilers, it should simply be said that the moment the other villain
of the
film (that is not Madd's Mickelson) encounters Strange is one
of the best
climaxes of the
entire MCU.
Emily is put in major peril three times, including during the
climax in which she must be willing to die for the greater good, and it's the most distasteful element
of the
film, which gets away with a lot
of other questionable material (e.g., the
entire premise and one
of the best bad Lincoln assassination jokes one will ever hear) through humor.