


In any case, Sierra are no strangers to publishing licensed games prior to their recent absorption into the Activision-Blizzard fold, they had published more than a few licensed titles of mild interest and questionable quality, inclusive of but not limited to The Hobbit, Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Chaos Bleeds and Aliens vs.

Generally speaking, this has been happening for longer than some of you out there have been alive, and will probably continue long past the point when all of us are dead, simply because licensed properties make money, no matter how the end products turn out. I give it a 6,5/10.So here’s a story we’ve heard a million times or more: a publisher manages to get their hands on a license of some degree of value, turns it over to a developer of variable talent, then sticks the results out into the market for the general public to latch onto like a cannibal on Jorge Garcia. It's certainly not an intellectual movie, but I didn't mind about that when watching it.

I guess it is best to qualify this movie as some excellent way to pass some boring hours on a cold and rainy afternoon. will of course never exist in reality, but it certainly was nice to see. Don't expect anything real: a mummy coming to life, sucking the life out of people, armies of mythological creatures. Thanks to the humor, this movie was very enjoyable, but it is of course the many special effects that make this movie what it is. Normally this kind of movies takes itself much too serious, there is no place for any joke or funny situation at all. What made this movie work for me was the humor. It's all to clear that the director's first thought wasn't about the script but about the many special effects, but i still quite liked the movie. So what can I tell you? Well, the movie isn't as bad as I expected. Most people compare this sequel to the first movie 'The Mummy', which is a good thing of course, but I haven't seen the first one, so no comparisons from me.
