Today the sequel that took 24 years to film and ended up failing at the box office after spending a huge budget arrives on Netflix

It took Ridley Scott 24 years to return to the Coliseum. When he did it with ‘Gladiator II‘, a cast that was breathtaking was brought in, with Paul Mescal, Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal and a budget that, depending on who you ask, exceeded 310 million dollars with the expectation of repeating the magic of its predecessor, which had won five Oscars in 2000. It didn’t quite succeed, but in streaming it has a second chance: you have it starting today Tuesday, April 28 on Netflix. The first announcement of a sequel to ‘Gladiator’ It dates back to June 2001, just a year after the release of the original. And Russell Crowe was on board even though his Maximus had died on screen. For years, Scott toyed with crazy ideas that included the resurrection of the character or a plot about the afterlife. The project stalled when DreamWorks sold the rights to the franchise to Paramount Pictures in 2006. What got the sequel out of limbo was that Scott saw Paul Mescal in the first few episodes of ‘Normal People’ and wanted to work with him. Scott also wanted to resolve the plot of Lucius Verus, then a child, now sixteen years after Maximus’ death. He lives under another identity in North Africa, until the Roman army invades and destroys his home, kills his wife and enslaves him. Brought to Rome as a gladiator, Lucius falls under the control of a former slave turned arms dealer, who uses him in the arena of the Colosseum while he secretly weaves his own plans to seize the throne from the corrupt twin emperors Caracalla and Geta. And so began an eventful filming, interrupted by the screenwriters’ strikes, which sent costs skyrocketing, according to some sources, beyond $300 million. With a final collection of 462 million worldwide, the business was somewhat lame. However, with its passage through platforms (in the United States it is exclusively on Paramount+, and has been on VOD for months), it is very possible that ‘Gladiator II’ can boast more comfortable profits and thus give rise to the already planned ‘Gladiator III’ in which Mescal has already expressed his interest. In Xataka | Today the animated spin-off of the platform’s only powerful franchise premieres on Netflix: ‘Stranger Things’

This official sequel premiered in 1991, but almost no one has seen it

Ah, attraction parks. In the United States they are part of the emporium of entertainment multinationals, and have a financial importance comparable to that of films. That’s why, adapted Different attractions are sometimes closeting films that have actors and directors of the original franchises in cinema and, therefore, function as more or less canonical sequelae. Some examples? Movies for attractions’Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission: Breakout!‘, In Disney California Adventure, with voices and performances by Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Bradley Cooper and Vin Diesel (Groot). EITHER ‘Harry Potter and The Forbidden Journey‘ and ‘Harry Potter and The Escape from Gringotts‘For the Universal Studios parks, where Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson resumed their papers. But none had the ambition and the great results of ‘Back to the Future: The Ride’. In fact, the film that accompanies the attraction, half an hour, It works as a quarter of the sagasince his events take place after ‘Back to the future III’, when Biff Tannen, the villain of the saga, steals a Delorean to Doc. The attraction was released in May 1991, only one year after the arrival in cinemas of the third film, which we remember that it was released in turn only four months after the second, which was shot simultaneously. The Universal Studios Florida arrived on May 2, 1991, a couple of years later to the Universal Studios Hollywood and, finally, already in 2001, the Universal Studios Japan de Osaka. With Christopher Lloyd and Thomas F. Wilson, retaking their Doc Brown and Biff Tannen roles, we moved to 1991 (that is, the present of the spectators of attraction). Doc Brown founded the Institute of Technology of the future. But when Biff steals a Delorean, Doc asks visitors, so that on board a delorean of eight passengers they embark on a persecution that takes them to the Jurassic period, to the year 2015, and to Hill Valley of 1955. Among the attractions of ‘Back to the Future: The Ride’ was the movement simulator that made him eight people had the impression of being aboard a delorean while looking at a huge IMAX dome -shaped screen that wrapped them with a 180 -degree view. Wind, smoke and strobe lights were used during the projection to make the trip more realistic and to increase the sensation of speed and movement. When the fame of ‘return to the future’ began to decline, the attraction was replaced by one of ‘the Simpsons’. In it, the creators allowed a good amount of winks to the attraction that had preceded them: Comic Book Guy with Marty’s futuristic jacket, an animated Doc Brown with the voice of Christopher Lloyd and references to the Institute of Technology of the future, which Doc has no choice but to sell to Professor Frink. The ‘Back To the Future: The Ride’ movie, restored and traced, appeared in various domestic editions of the saga as of 2010. Header | Universal In Xataka | The incredible history of marriage that lived 15 years in Disneyland without visitors realizing *An earlier version of this article was published in July 2024

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