Tuesday, January 8, 2013

New Wrath of the Titans movie list

New movie list Wrath of the Titans


A decade after his heroic defeat of the monstrous Kraken, Perseus-the demigod son of Zeus-is attempting to live a quieter life as a village fisherman and the sole parent to his 10-year old son, Helius. Meanwhile, a struggle for supremacy rages between the gods and the Titans. Dangerously weakened by humanity's lack of devotion, the gods are losing control of the imprisoned Titans and their ferocious leader, Kronos, father of the long-ruling brothers Zeus, Hades and Poseidon. Perseus cannot ignore his true calling when Hades, along with Zeus' godly son, Ares (Edgar Ramírez), switch loyalty and make a deal with Kronos to capture Zeus. The Titans' strength grows stronger as Zeus' remaining godly powers are siphoned... -- (C) Warner Bros.
Release Date Wrath of the Titans Mar 30, 2012 Wide
Wrath

Actors For Wrath of the Titans

Sam Worthington,Gemma Arterton,Liam Neeson,Ralph Fiennes,Edgar Ramirez,Toby Kebbell,Rosamund Pike,Bill Nighy,Danny Huston,John Bell,Lily James,Alejandro Naranjo,Freddy Drabble,Kathryn Carpenter,Matt Milne,Kett Turton,Sinead Cusack,Spencer Wilding,Juan Reyes,Jorge Guimera

Genres Wrath of the Titans : Action & Adventure,Science Fiction & Fantasy

User Ranting Wrath of the Titans : 3.2
User Percentage For Wrath of the Titans : %
User Count Like for Wrath of the Titans : 143,735
All Critics Ranting For Wrath of the Titans : 4.5
All Critics Count For Wrath of the Titans : 164
All Critics Percentage For Wrath of the Titans : 26 %

Review For Wrath of the Titans

For those with a burning curiosity to know how The Lord of the Rings as directed by Michael Bay might look, Wrath of the Titans provides an idea.
James Berardinelli-ReelViews

What it lacks are the very elements that made the first movie such a surprise: wit and nerve.
Mark Holcomb-Village Voice

This feeble followup to 2010's godawful Clash of the Titans sucketh the mighty big one.
Peter Travers-Rolling Stone

Worthington remains a distinctly humourless hero, which makes you long for the likes of a prime-time Harrison Ford or Arnold Schwarzenegger, who knew how to make a fondue out of cheese.
Peter Howell-Toronto Star

The father of the gods turned out to be a CGI-created, lava-spewing, mountain-sized creature with smudgy features and all the eloquence of a belch.
-Globe and Mail

A movie in which whole sequences consist of nothing but guys fighting stiff computer images. Such scenes would be boring even were they done well, but these scenes aren't done well.
Mick LaSalle-San Francisco Chronicle

Wrath of the Titans is a welcome improvement but if you didn't like the first film, this sequel is not going to reverse your negative opinion.
Kofi Outlaw-ScreenRant

...it would seem like [Worthington] was inoculated against charisma as a child.
Adam Ross-The Aristocrat

Wrath of the Titans rewards us for having to sit through its poorly made predecessor. It's full of expensive visuals, intense action sequences and even more ancient myths and creatures.
Jeremy Lebens-We Got This Covered

[I]f you are planning on seeing it, do yourself a favor and stick with good old fashioned 2-D. However, if you want to do yourself a bigger favor, you should just skip it altogether
Jeff Beck-Examiner.com

Admittedly, Wrath of the Titans is a step up from its predecessor but that's not saying a whole lot. It's by no means a good film and unless you really enjoyed the first film, there's no reason you should see this.
Matt Joseph-We Got This Covered

With every inch of screen filled with pixel paint and indistinguishable action, the whole thing just became mind-numbing to watch.
Matt Looker-TheShiznit.co.uk

"Wrath of the Titans" is like a shiny Mylar balloon that pops to reveal nothing inside but empty, stale air.
Justin Craig-FoxNews.com

superficial blockbuster fodder, furthering the worrying decline in Worthington's output since Avatar.
James Luxford-The National

It's an improvement on Clash of the Titans, obviously ... but in the end, 'forgettable' is only slightly better than 'god awful.'
William Bibbiani-CraveOnline

Even if it isn't saying much, Wrath of the Titans stands as a minor improvement to its predecessor.
Mark Pfeiffer-Reel Times: Reflections on Cinema

Fixes most of the problems with the first film and forges a path for a respectable trilogy...
Felix Vasquez Jr.-Cinema Crazed

Certainly sloppy, but visually rich, exciting and, thanks to several great supporting roles, a better, more character-driven tale that tops the original despite a more intimate feel.
R. L. Shaffer-IGN DVD

The gods must be on steroids!
Kam Williams-NewsBlaze

...an unnecessary sequel to an unnecessary remake. (Blu-ray Combo edition)
John J. Puccio-Movie Metropolis

...all spectacle and little plot, all show and little characterization, all CGI and little story.
John J. Puccio-Movie Metropolis

Near-epic in preposterousness. So, swamped by CGI spectacle, wonder: what came first, overblown super-sneezes of action or the tissue-thin plot to wrap them in? Forget gods getting it on with humans; here, non-story meets quasi-show, begets a demi-star.
Brian Gibson-Vue Weekly (Edmonton, Canada)

Wrath, clash ... whatever.
Linda Cook-Quad City Times (Davenport, IA)

More than sufficiently delivers on muscular spectacle, and features one of the most acute visions of mortal terror I can recall in the movies.
Rob Humanick-Projection Booth

A seriously underwhelming sequel...
David Nusair-Reel Film Reviews

A better story, more humor, and a decent 3D conversion make the swordplay spectacle more tolerable. And hey, 2 Oscar winners play Greek gods!
Bruce Bennett-Spectrum (St. George, Utah)

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