Did I identify all of the adverbs, adjectives,comparatives, and superlatives?

Recently (adverb) I watched the 2006 version of The Hills Have Eyes. It was different (adjective) from the 1977 (adjective) version. The movie is about a family that ends up (adverb) broken down (adverb) in the middle (adverb) of the desert, on a non-traveled (adjective) dead end (adjective) road. That happens to be in the middle of an old (adjective) military (adjective) nuclear (adjective) test ground. They start getting killed off one by one (adverb), and then they realize (adjective) that they are not alone. Each movie is unique (adjective), and in every (adverb) remake, you can always (adverb) see the similarities and differences. One noticeable difference (comparative) was the amount of time and technique put into the costumes. Still, the movie had many (adverb) great moments. The acting was not the greatest (comparative) but the story was more realistic (adverb).The previews for
The Hills Have Eyes remake had less (comparative) advertisement than the 1977 version. I think both versions were well written but I am a bigger fan of the remake. To this day it is still one of the freakiest (superlative) movies I have ever seen. Even though The Hills Have Eyes was not the scariest (superlative) movie I have ever seen.

Also adjectives:

2006
alone
great
1977
both

noticeable -- adj, but not comparative

greatest = superlative adjective

Also adverbs:
then
Still
well
ever
not

This is a verb, not an adjective:
~then they realize (adjective)

These are not adverbs:
~ends up (adverb) broken down (adverb) in the middle (adverb)
~one by one (adverb)
~in every (adverb) remake

Comparatives and superlatives:
http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/adjectives.htm#comparative

See this, also, for phrasal verbs:

http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/phrasals.htm

ends up
broken down
killed off

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Also, "realistic" is not an adverb.

Thank you very much for all of your help

You're welcome.

You have correctly identified the adverbs, adjectives, comparatives, and superlatives in the given text. Here is the breakdown:

Adverbs:
- Recently
- End up
- Broken down
- In the middle
- One by one
- Always
- Every
- More
- Not the greatest

Adjectives:
- Different
- 1977
- Non-traveled
- Dead end
- Old
- Military
- Nuclear
- Unique
- Many
- Great
- Realistic
- Less
- Well written
- Freakiest
- Scariest

Comparatives:
- Noticeable (comparative form of "noticeable")
- Greatest (comparative form of "great")
- More (comparative form of "realistic")
- Less (comparative form of "much")

Superlatives:
- Freakiest (superlative form of "freaky")
- Scariest (superlative form of "scary")

To identify the adverbs, adjectives, comparatives, and superlatives in a text, you can look for words that describe or modify nouns, pronouns, or verbs. Adverbs often end in "-ly" and describe how an action is performed. Adjectives describe qualities or characteristics of nouns or pronouns. Comparatives are forms of adjectives used to compare two things, and superlatives are forms of adjectives used to compare three or more things.