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Superheroes, robots, aliens and intelligent apes promise an action-packed summer at theatres

Pirate Jack Sparrow embarks on a new quest. Wizard Harry Potter comes to the end of his saga. And swarms of new superheroes come out swinging.
Film Summer Preview Action
In this film publicity image released by Paramount Pictures and Marvel Entertainment

LOS ANGELES — Pirate Jack Sparrow embarks on a new quest. Wizard Harry Potter comes to the end of his saga. And swarms of new superheroes come out swinging.

Add in a third round of giant robots from space, the dawn of a planet of intelligent apes and an alien invasion in the Old West, and Hollywood has one of its most action-packed summers ever in store.

Continuing franchises include Johnny Depp’s Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides; the battling ’bots sequel Transformers: Dark of the Moon; and the prequels X-Men: First Class and Rise of the Planet of the Apes.

New comic-book adaptations join Hollywood’s superhero fixation with Thor, Green Lantern and Captain America: The First Avenger.

Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig team up to take on extra-terrestrial raiders in the sci-fi and Western hybrid Cowboys & Aliens. Lost creator J.J. Abrams directs his own E.T.-style adventure with Super 8, a tale of teen filmmakers whose monster movie turns real after a train wreck unleashes an alien force.

Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint head back to Hogwarts one last time for the final showdown between good and evil wizards with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2.

The adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s finale to her fantasy series was split into two films, the first leaving off with last fall’s cliffhanger involving the death match between Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) and dark Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes).

Deathly Hallows: Part 2 joins other action franchises that are going the 3-D route for the first time, among them the Pirates of the Caribbean and Transformers sequels.

Dark of the Moon reunites Transformers star Shia LaBeouf and director Michael Bay as an event out of Earth’s past touches off a new round in the struggle between two warring robot races.

After wrapping up the original story line in a trilogy, Pirates of the Caribbean returns in a stand-alone story that sends Depp’s Jack Sparrow on a hunt for the fountain of youth.

On Stranger Tides co-stars Penelope Cruz and Ian McShane, with Geoffrey Rush back as Jack’s old nemesis Barbossa.

Director Rob Marshall jumped right in on the sword fights and other action in On Stranger Tides, saying the song-and-dance moves he crafted in such musicals as Chicago and Nine were good training ground.

Superheroes are everywhere this summer, with the stars of Thor and Captain America making solo debuts before joining the all-star lineup of summer 2012’s The Avengers. That ensemble tale will feature Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson and Samuel L. Jackson from the Iron Man franchise along with Mark Ruffalo as the Incredible Hulk.

Captain America stars Chris Evans, padding his superhero resume after co-starring as the Human Torch in the Fantastic Four flicks.

Evans’ Steve Rogers is a 98-pound weakling who volunteers for a military program that bulks him up into super-soldier Captain America, leading a team of heroes battling arch-villain Red Skull (Hugo Weaving).

Thor casts the Norse god of thunder into exile among puny humans on Earth, where he hooks up with a team of scientists (Natalie Portman among them) and joins the fight against a bad guy from his own realm.

In his fall, Thor has lost much of his power, including the ability to wield his mighty hammer.

While Thor is sent down to the minors, the hero of Green Lantern is called up from Earth to join a league of galactic peacekeepers.

Ryan Reynolds stars as an ordinary guy who gains superpowers from a ring bestowed by a dying alien.

As the first human to join the Green Lantern Corps — essentially, interstellar cops on the beat — his character becomes the key to stopping an evil force. But he encounters a little alien bigotry along the way.

X-Men: First Class features James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender as the future Professor X and Magneto — superpowered mutants who start as allies but end up deadly enemies in their quest to find a place for their freak-of-nature kinsmen.

Another prequel, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, has James Franco and Freida Pinto leading the human cast as research into simian intelligence puts the world under new management.

Interspecies conflict comes to the Old West, too, in Cowboys & Aliens as a mysterious gunslinger (Craig) and a cattle baron (Ford) put together a posse of townsfolk, outlaws and Apache Indians to go after bad guys from space in 1873.

Cowboys & Aliens director Jon Favreau, who made Iron Man and its sequel, said the hit Western True Grit and the Wild West animated comedy Rango were nice lead-ins after a long dry spell for the genre.

Director Abrams created his own mash-up with Super 8, combining two projects he had been developing: a story inspired by his boyhood filmmaking endeavours and a sci-fi adventure about a train that derails while carrying an alien presence from Area 51.

The teen filmmaker idea had good characters but lacked plot punch, Abrams said.

Other action highlights:

• Fright Night: The remake of the 1980s horror comedy stars Colin Farrell as a newcomer targeting the kid next door (Anton Yelchin), who has discovered his neighbour’s a vampire.

• 30 Minutes or Less: Jesse Eisenberg stars in an action comedy about a pizza delivery guy abducted by crooks and forced to rob a bank.

• Conan the Barbarian: The new take on the ancient warrior has Conan (Jason Momoa) on a personal vendetta that turns into a heroic mission against supernatural evil.

• Priest: A warrior priest (Paul Bettany) in a world besieged by vampires sets out to rescue his abducted niece before the blood-suckers make her one of their own.