«22 Jump Street» will likely be more
successful than the first film, but an R - rated comedy just has no chance against a high quality family - friendly animated film.
Not exact matches
Fewer follows ups have been more anticipated
than The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, the
first in a new trilogy of
films set in the much beloved Middle Earth, previously seen in the hugely
successful Lord of the Rings trilogy.
After a
successful outing in
First Contact, Jonathan Frakes (Thunderbirds) takes the director's helm once again with a pleasant but uninvolving outing which seems more in tune with the style of the TV series
than the
film series, special effects notwithstanding.
The
film's most
successful elements felt cribbed from the
first film and the pacing left me more
than a little bit sleepy; I also felt legitimately bad for Rose Byrne, who is basically given nothing to do aside from trip over baby toys and get smacked in the head a lot.
Played by Ryan Reynolds, (a fan's dream actor to play the role), his
first appearance, like the
film, was less
than successful.
As Marvel's
first successful comic - book - to -
film adaptation, the original «Blade» instantly became an underground hit with the sleek, yet comical Wesley Snipes headlining as the title character, and even «Blade 2» was more
than a mere duplicate thanks to its thorough vampire history, but «Blade: Trinity» is nothing more
than a blended carbon copy with a bloodthirsty desire to maximize the death count.
Each of director Ryan Coogler's
first three
films — Fruitvale, Creed and Black Panther — has been not just bigger and more
successful than the one that came before — but also arguably better.
Ted 2 is bound to be a more commercially
successful film than West, especially considering that the Ted series has a large number of fans of the
first film.
The fourth
film is expected to earn around 2.5 billion yen from its domestic run, less
than one third of the total gross of the franchise's
first and most
successful film, Yo - kai Watch: Tanjou no Himitsu da Nyan!