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The Purge: Election Year is a 2016 American dystopian political action horror film written and directed by James DeMonaco and starring Frank Grillo, Elizabeth Mitchell, and Mykelti Williamson. It is the sequel to The Purge: Anarchy and is the third installment in the Purge franchise. Jason Blum and Michael Bay are among the film's producers.
It was released worldwide on July 18, 2014 and is set in 2023, a year after the first film. [25] [26] Edwin Hodge (The Stranger), Tyler Osterkamp (The Freak), and Nathan Clarkson (The Purger) were the only cast members to reprise their role, while only Hodge was credited. A third film, The Purge: Election Year, was released on July 1, 2016. [27]
[8] [9] The film is the fifth installment of the franchise, and is a direct sequel to The Purge: Election Year. [10] [11] In August 2019, it was announced that the film would be directed by Everardo Valerio Gout, who was hired based on his work directing episodes of the 2016 National Geographic series Mars. [12] [13]
Set in 2023, one year after the original movie, The Purge: ... The two-season Purge series takes place in the years between Anarchy and The Purge: Election Year. The show’s first season follows ...
Over five low-budget box office hits and a two-season TV series, “The Purge” saga — which portrays a not-too-distant-future America where all crimes, including murder, are legal for one ...
The Purge is an American anthology media franchise centered on a series of dystopian action horror films distributed by Universal Pictures and produced by Blumhouse Productions and Platinum Dunes, which are written and in some cases also directed by James DeMonaco, who was inspired by a Star Trek: The Original Series episode, "The Return of the Archons".
The Purge: Election Year; F. ... The Purge (2013 film) This page was last edited on 27 May 2024, at 09:31 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
At a rally in Pennsylvania on Sunday the former president suggested that one way to decrease levels of criminal activity would be allowing police ‘one rough hour’