The film stars Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen and Forest Whitaker. But at the same time it’s soul-destroying that audiences keep lapping it up in their droves. Forest WhitakerDougray ScottSam SpruellDon HarveyLeland OrserDylan BrunoLiam NeesonDavid. It is the sequel to the 2012 film Taken 2 and the third and final installment in the Taken film series. It’s almost offensive that Hollywood regularly feeds us this same hackneyed tripe at least half a dozen times a year. It has the same nauseatingly bad script, predictably tedious plot, offensively clichéd characterization and lifeless action that has populated hundreds of lame action films before it. The cast was removed today, but the fracture clinic was so busy today I basically just got shoved out after it was removed.
The remaining 5 weeks were spent in a more light weight colored fiberglass cast. It's impossible, however, to be impressed by Liam Neeson as Bryan Mills because the men he goes up against are so preposterously inept. For the first 3 weeks I was in a heavy duty plaster cast that came upto my knee. The cast try their best, especially Forest Whitaker, who adds some nice traits to Inspector Franck Dotzler. It’s weak, lazy filmmaking that makes you wonder where Taken 3's $48-million budget was spent. On at least two separate occasions - once in an elevator and the other down a cliff - Bryan Mills is heading towards certain death, only for him to appear alive and well in the next scene after the melee has died down - while we’re none the wiser to how he survived. Cannot support skills used by totems, traps, or mines. Each supported spell skill will track damage you take, and be triggered when the total damage taken reaches a threshold. There is no logistics or rhythm to the action scenes, and you find yourself completely lost amidst the flying punches and colliding cars. It causes a linked spell to trigger when the player takes a certain amount of damage. Despite possessing a name that suggests he was born to direct action films, Olivier Megaton’s frenzied approach to Taken 3’s set-pieces is so deliriously energetic and furious that it’s impossible to get your bearings.