‘Paul Blart’ returns to the big screens after a six year hiatus in its 2015 sequel. Mall cop Blart vacations in Vegas with his teenage daughter before she starts college. Vegas crime sprees make officer Blart jump into action and back in uniform. ‘Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2’ hit theaters on Friday, April 17.

The movie runs for 1 hour and 34 minutes. Rotten Tomatoes rated it 65% on the Audience Score. The film received a 3.5/5 rating out of 16,762 ratings.

The cast members are Kevin James as Paul Blart, Neal McDonough as Vincent, Daniella Alonso as Divina Martinez, David Henrie as Lane, Raini Rodriguez as Maya Blart, Loni Love as Donna Ericone, D.B. Woodside as Robinson, Eduardo Verástegui as Eduardo, Nicholas Turturro as Nick Manero, Gary Valentine as Saul Gundermutt, Geovanni Gopradi as Ramos, Vic Dibitetto as Gino Chizetti, and Ana Gasteyer as Mrs. Gundermutt.

Andy Fickman is the director. It was written by Kevin James and Nick Bakay. It was produced by Happy Madison Productions and distributed by Columbia Pictures, a Sony company.

Kevin James (Blart) is an American comedy actor, writer, and producer. James is famous for his role as Doug Heffernan on the television sitcom series 'The King of Queens.' Other comedy films he has starred in are 'I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry,' 'Grown Ups,' and 'Hitch.' He is married to Steffiana de la Cruz and has four children. He turns 50 on April 26.

Reviews on Rotten Tomatoes:

“Kevin James keeps falling on his face and colliding with heavy objects, this time in Vegas, in this tacky, numbingly inane sequel,” critiqued Justin Chang of Variety.

“James tries hard, very hard, to inject the proceedings with slapstick humor, propelling his large body through endless physical contortions in a fruitless effort for laughs,” critiqued Frank Sheck of Hollywood Reporter.

“More slapstick humor; strongest appeal for Kevin James fans,” wrote S. Jhoanna Robledo of Common Sense Media.

“It's like Die Hard if Bruce Willis was overweight, socially inept, clumsy, and kind of dimwitted,” wrote Willie Waffle of Waffle Movies.

“Your enjoyment (or not) of the material will depend solely on whether you find James' portrayal of this character entertaining,” wrote Jim Judy.