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Born of a god but raised as a man, Perseus is helpless to save his family from Hades, vengeful god of the underworld. With nothing to lose, Perseus volunteers to lead a dangerous mission to defeat ...
Obviously, no one comes to a movie like this for repartee ... making them harder to follow rather than exciting. “Clash of the Titans” is also burdened by a numskull plot notion.
His reviews are published in IMDb's External Reviews and in Google News. Previously you could find his work at Empire Movies, Blogcritics, and AltFilmGuide. Now you can find his work at FilmBook.
For movie lovers and fantasy fans of a certain age, Clash of the Titans was their first exposure not just to the work of Ray Harryhausen (who died on May 7, 2013, at the age of 92), but to the ...
The original “Clash of the Titans” (1981) was a last hurrah for Ray Harryhausen, the stop-motion king of such 1950s, ’60s and ’70s movie extravaganzas as “The 7th Voyage of Sinbad ...
The Lightning Thief," and the remake of the 1981 movie "Clash of the Titans." The release of the two movies in the same calendar year sets up a cinematic clash, as different actors take the roles ...
Starring Avatar‘s Sam Worthington as the warrior Perseus, Ralph Fiennes as Hades and Liam Neeson — in the role originally played by Laurence Olivier — as Zeus, this Clash is a CGI-filled ...
His part is surely the best in the movie and he’s clearly having ... the kind of fondness people feel for the original “Clash of the Titans,” campy though it is.
“Titans” is both dark and busy visually, and nearly devoid of humor. Indeed, the one memorable laugh, a fleeting reference to the first movie’s idiotic mechanical owl, will likely fly over ...
into Perseus’ skin and you’d still have a terrible movie. Worthington just makes it worse. So how bad is this “Clash of the Titans”? Let’s just say a word has not yet been invented to ...