Though it does have some thrilling sequences and another exceptional performance by Liam Neeson. The percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who have given this movie a positive review. The tables are turned and this time Liam Neeson's daughter has to rescue him in this tired sequel.

Let that name roll off your tongue (Olivier, not Oliver). The sequel is dominated by eye-rolling character moments, disjointed plot lines, and mostly underwhelming onscreen action. However, in an attempt to cash in on a successful standalone movie, the filmmakers have stretched the straightforward.

Taken 2

Save yourself the time and expense and skip this terrible movie. I dislike almost all his movies, The Grey, Taken, Clash of the Titans, Wrath of the Titans, Battleship Unknown The A-Team, The Dark Knight. The relatives of the Albanian criminals he killed in the first film whilst rescuing his daughter are seeking revenge. Liam Neeson isn't a young guy, and as much as I. Yet somehow, Liam Neeson growls through this just-acceptable action sequel with his dignity intact, his wallet bigger and his movie family oblivious to all that occurred in. Will she be able to 'save' the couple?

Trailer Taken 2

Anyone who thinks any of the above constitutes a spoiler is not the audience for the phenomenon of the Taken oeuvre, a pair of icy-eyed movies laid over a gooey core of aspirational family bonding. Not only does it have that same appalling moral vacuum at the centre (it doesn't matter how many irrelevant people you torture and kill to rescue your loved. The movie is emphatically, even gleefully preposterous.

Mills' daughter Kim ( Maggie Grace ), the subject of the titular taking in the first film, is on hand as a sort of sidekick this time; after Mills and Lenny are abducted, she helps find them through the careful use of. There's no padding, but with everything the plot needs to do, it feels rushed. Your review has nice flow and revealed a lot more to. CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE: Liam Neeson, centre, in an action scene from Taken IT'S A NEW week, and a new movie to thrash or appraise.