12/29/2023 0 Comments Hitman bodyguard 2Our DVD and Blu-ray sales estimates are based on weekly retail surveys, which we use to build a weekly market share estimate for each title we are tracking. International Cumulative Box Office Records Millennium Films, Lionsgate, Nu Boyana, Campbell Grobman Films, Film i Vast, Filmgate Films R for strong bloody violence throughout, pervasive language, and some sexual content.Īction Comedy, Retirement, Out of Retirement July 22nd, 2021 by Lionsgate Home Entertainment June 11th, 2021 (Wide), released as Duro de cuidar 2 ( Mexico) See the Box Office tab (Domestic) and International tab (International and Worldwide) for more Cumulative Box Office Records.Īmazon EST, Amazon 4K UHD EST, Amazon VOD/EST, Amazon 4K UHD VOD/EST Latest Ranking on Cumulative Box Office ListsĪll Time Domestic Box Office (Rank 2,301-2,400)Īll Time International Box Office (Rank 2,701-2,800)Īll Time Worldwide Box Office (Rank 2,401-2,500)Īll Time Domestic Box Office for Comedy Movies (Rank 401-500)Īll Time International Box Office for Comedy Movies (Rank 301-400)Īll Time Worldwide Box Office for Comedy Movies (Rank 301-400)Īll Time Domestic Box Office for R Movies (Rank 701-800)Īll Time International Box Office for R Movies (Rank 701-800)Īll Time Worldwide Box Office for R Movies (Rank 701-800) theaters, 3.9 weeks average run per theater $70,000,000 (worldwide box office is 1.0 times production budget)ģ,331 opening theaters/3,361 max. Joining in the fun and deadly mayhem is Morgan Freeman as… well, you’ll have to see.ģ.34 (domestic box office/biggest weekend) As Bryce is driven over the edge by his two most dangerous protectees, the trio get in over their heads in a global plot and soon find that they are all that stand between Europe and a vengeful and powerful madman. Still unlicensed and under scrutiny, Bryce is forced into action by Darius’s even more volatile wife, the infamous international con artist Sonia Kincaid. The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard is released on 18 June in cinemas.The world’s most lethal odd couple-bodyguard Michael Bryce and hitman Darius Kincaid-are back on another life-threatening mission. There are some almost-laughs here and there, but please tell me that we aren’t in for The Hitman’s Mother-In-Law’s Agent’s Bodyguard in 2023. To add to all his anxieties, Michael is also afflicted by feelings of inferiority in comparison with his stepfather, a legendary veteran bodyguard: a great big comedy cameo for a big name who is entirely wasted in the part. There are also some weirdly pedantic references to the Goldie Hawn comedy Overboard, perhaps to pre-empt objections to possible plot-borrowings. (This would have been topical around the time of the “Grexit” row of 2012.) So we have loads of Euro-locations and loads of car chase scenes through picturesque tourist cities, with cars lumbering down crumbling stone steps and at one stage even smashing through the traditional fruit-stall. The idea is that he will use a super-strong drill to damage the underwater junction box that holds the data for the European Union’s computer systems, as a revenge for the EU beating up on his home country. They find themselves up against Greek supervillain Aristotle Papadopoulous, played by Antonio Banderas with such an uncompromising refusal to do a Greek accent that at first I thought it had to be some kind of gag. So the wacky trio are back together again, Reynolds getting whatever laugh lines there are going, as he is bemused and depressed by the situation that this couple have put him in, though not as bemused and depressed as all of us in the audience. Michael is stripped of his “licence” to practise bodyguarding and is now in therapy but just as he decides to take a restorative European break by the pool, Michael gets sucked right back into the melee by Kincaid’s badass wife Sonia, in which role Salma Hayek is once again phoning in her hellcat routine. Ryan Reynolds is back as Michael Bryce, the former triple-A rated bodyguard, now haunted and traumatised by his professional failures, and by his association with the notorious assassin Darius Kincaid, played by Samuel L Jackson. Anyway, here’s the sequel with the extra-clumsy double-possessive in the title. Here’s the tiresome follow-up to the tiresome action comedy with the tiresomely (and unfunnily) muddled premise: bodyguards generally protect people against hitmen and hitmen generally don’t need bodyguards as they’re not publicly visible … but that wasn’t the point.
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