News

So, Agent 47 and Zachary Quinto (who I’ve decided is a character in the film for simplicity’s sake) are fighting in a subway station, on the tracks, and the camera is shaking big time.
In Hitman, Agent 47 can plant a bomb literally anywhere on the map.If the bomb is discovered, or if it explodes, it will set off a sequence of events that must all play out and be accounted for in ...
Hitman: Agent 47, the 47th installment of the Hitman: Agent series, hits theaters today. In honor of this long-running, beloved series, we decided to take a look back at the previous 46 Hitman ...
Thumbnail: Hitman: Agent 47 has enjoyable action, paper-thin characters, and an incomprehensible plot. Well, one out of three ain't bad. The good news is that the R-rated film cost just $35 ...
By the time we meet back up with Agent 47 in Hitman 2: Silent Assassin, he's retired and living a peaceful life as a gardener at a Sicilian church.
Summary. Agent 47 (Timothy Olyphant) has been educated to become a professional assassin for hire, whose most powerful weapons are his nerve and a resolute pride in his work. 47 is both the last ...
At various points, Hitman 3 asks players to follow mission-critical characters who are either unaware of Agent 47’s presence or simply leading him to another part of the level for a story event ...
Agent 47’s lucha libre fight to the death with an eight-foot-tall mutant Mexican wrestler was Absolution’s shark-jumping moment. More than 30 stones of lumpen muscle, and growing every day ...
Agent 47 himself has gone from a monosyllabic monster – the Silent Assassin – to an agent with agency over the course of the games. In Hitman: Absolution, he was forced to go rogue, and that ...
Agent 47 is tracking down Katia (Hannah Ware from TV’s “Boss”), a nervous, neurotic woman with amazing mathematical skills and troubling flashbacks.
Agent 47, which was originally expected to star Fast and Furious actor Paul Walker before he died in a car crash, focuses on the genetically engineered killing machine played by Friend.
The idea of the high-tech, emotionless super-soldier is so popular in movies, it’s practically a convention. The “Terminator” and “Bourne” franchises, and even last year’s animated ...