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Taken is a series of English-language French action films, beginning with Taken in 2008, created by producer Luc Besson and American screenwriter Robert Mark Kamen. The dialogue of all three films is primarily English, and all three feature Liam Neeson as Bryan Mills.
A trailer of Taken 3 the film saw its release on January 1, 2015, in Hong Kong and South Korea; on January 8, the film was released in the UK, in Spain on January 16, in France on January 21 and on February 12 in Italy. [18] 20th Century Fox released the film on 9 January 2015 in the United States. [19]
Taken 2 grossed $139.9 million in North America and $236.3 million in other territories, which brings the film's worldwide total to $376.1 million against a budget of $45 million. [ 2 ] For its opening day in North America, the film topped the box office and earned $18.4 million, [ 14 ] $1.5 million of which came from midnight showings. [ 12 ]
Taken is a 2008 English-language French action-thriller film directed by Pierre Morel and written by Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen. It stars Liam Neeson , Maggie Grace , Leland Orser , Jon Gries , David Warshofsky , Katie Cassidy , Holly Valance and Famke Janssen .
Leland Jones Orser (born August 6, 1960) is an American actor, director and writer. He has appeared in numerous film and television roles since his debut in 1991, notably as Lucien Dubenko on the television series ER (2004–09), Father Romero on Ray Donovan (2015–16), Richard Stratton on American Gigolo (2022–present), and Sam Gilroy in the Taken film series (2008–14).
In March of 2023, the couple welcomed a daughter, Matilda.Of his new father status, Pelphrey says it's a "miracle" and the most "beautiful, amazing thing ever."
[1] [better source needed] The series won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries and was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Outstanding Miniseries or TV Movie. [2] When the show was launched, the Sci-Fi Channel used the simultaneous establishment of the organization Coalition for Freedom of Information in its promotion campaign. [3]
Charlie Chaplin, both director and star of The Gold Rush, did 63 separate takes of a scene where his character eats a boot—in reality, a prop made of licorice—and ended up being taken to the hospital for insulin shock due to the high sugar intake. [1] Chaplin also did 342 takes of a scene in City Lights (1931). [citation needed]