Liam Neeson Teamed Up With a ‘Yellowstone’ Star for This 26% Blockbuster Disaster Now Streaming for Free
Liam Neeson has enjoyed a renaissance lately thanks to the surprise success of his comedy sequel The Naked Gun, but one of his biggest
box office misfires is about to resurface. Wrath of the Titans, the $150 million fantasy epic that paired Neeson with Yellowstone star Danny
Huston, will begin streaming for free on Vizio starting October 1. Released in March 2012 as a sequel to Clash of the Titans, the Jonathan Liebesman–directed film brought back Neeson as Zeus, this time fighting to escape imprisonment by the ancient Titans.

The film also came at a turning point for Worthington, who had skyrocketed to fame after James Cameron plucked him out of obscurity for Avatar in 2009. Just before that, audiences had seen him in Terminator Salvation, and immediately after, he starred in Clash of the Titans, so with three blockbusters under his belt, Worthington admitted he became “arrogant” — something he later said poisoned his experience on Wrath of the Titans.

That tension ultimately killed the franchise. A third installment, tentatively titled Revenge of the Titans, was quietly scrapped, leaving Wrath as the end of the line, but to be honest — that wasn’t the worst thing. The films also came at the height of post-Avatar “everything must be 3D” craze, with retrofitted 3D somehow making the movie even worse to look at. Best consigned to history, but if you are a Greek god completionist, check it out.

Liam Neeson has enjoyed a renaissance lately thanks to the surprise success of his comedy sequel The Naked Gun, but one of his biggest box office misfires is about to resurface. Wrath of the Titans, the $150 million fantasy epic that paired Neeson with Yellowstone star Danny Huston, will begin streaming for free on Vizio starting October 1. Released in March 2012 as a sequel to Clash of the Titans, the Jonathan Liebesman–directed film brought back Neeson as Zeus, this time fighting to escape imprisonment by the ancient Titans.
The film also came at a turning point for Worthington, who had skyrocketed to fame after James Cameron plucked him out of obscurity for Avatar in 2009. Just before that, audiences had seen him in Terminator Salvation, and immediately after, he starred in Clash of the Titans, so with three blockbusters under his belt, Worthington admitted he became “arrogant” — something he later said poisoned his experience on Wrath of the Titans.
That tension ultimately killed the franchise. A third installment, tentatively titled Revenge of the Titans, was quietly scrapped, leaving Wrath as the end of the line, but to be honest — that wasn’t the worst thing. The films also came at the height of post-Avatar “everything must be 3D” craze, with retrofitted 3D somehow making the movie even worse to look at. Best consigned to history, but if you are a Greek god completionist, check it out.
Liam Neeson has enjoyed a renaissance lately thanks to the surprise success of his comedy sequel The Naked Gun, but one of his biggest box office misfires is about to resurface. Wrath of the Titans, the $150 million fantasy epic that paired Neeson with Yellowstone star Danny Huston, will begin streaming for free on Vizio starting October 1. Released in March 2012 as a sequel to Clash of the Titans, the Jonathan Liebesman–directed film brought back Neeson as Zeus, this time fighting to escape imprisonment by the ancient Titans.
The film also came at a turning point for Worthington, who had skyrocketed to fame after James Cameron plucked him out of obscurity for Avatar in 2009. Just before that, audiences had seen him in Terminator Salvation, and immediately after, he starred in Clash of the Titans, so with three blockbusters under his belt, Worthington admitted he became “arrogant” — something he later said poisoned his experience on Wrath of the Titans.
That tension ultimately killed the franchise. A third installment, tentatively titled Revenge of the Titans, was quietly scrapped, leaving Wrath as the end of the line, but to be honest — that wasn’t the worst thing. The films also came at the height of post-Avatar “everything must be 3D” craze, with retrofitted 3D somehow making the movie even worse to look at. Best consigned to history, but if you are a Greek god completionist, check it out.