Rush Hour 3 A Go

I really enjoyed “Rush Hour 2.” I thought the film had beautifully choreographed action sequences, great on-location shots, and was generally very funny and feel-good. So I am looking forward to this one. It’s been too long, and Chris Tucker needs to get back to work. His potential to become the next big on-screen comedian is real. He just can’t ask for $20 million per picture. So here’s what New Line execs themselves have to say about the upcoming sequel. It’s a done deal. Read ahead…

New Line Cinema has officially greenlit “Rush Hour 3” with Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan signed on to star and Brett Ratner set to direct the latest installment of the popular franchise. New Line Production President Toby Emmerich announced today that the film will start production this Fall for a planned 2007 release.

Tucker and Chan will reprise their respective roles as LAPD detective James Carter and Chinese Chief Inspector Lee in the film, which will feature the action comedy duo traveling to Paris to battle a wing of the Chinese organized crime family, the Triads.

“We are thrilled to team up with Chris, Jackie and Brett again to bring another installment of this entertaining franchise to life,” says Emmerich. “The first two ‘Rush Hour’ films have become pop culture classics, and we are confident that the third one will deliver the trademark mix of great action and big laughs that made the previous films so successful.”

“Rush Hour 3” will be directed by Ratner (“Rush Hour” franchise, “X-Men: The Last Stand,” “Red Dragon”) from a screenplay by “Rush Hour 2” writerJeff Nathanson (“Catch Me If You Can,” “The Terminal”). The film is being produced by Arthur Sarkissian, Roger Birnbaum (“Memoirs of a Geisha”), Jay Stern and Jonathan Glickman (“The Pacifier”).

Production is being overseen for New Line by Emmerich and production executives Mark Kaufman and Michael Disco.

The previous films in the “Rush Hour” franchise — including 1998’s “Rush Hour” and 2001’s “Rush Hour 2” — have a combined box office gross of nearly $1 billion worldwide.