[Review] BLUE-RAY Terminator: Dark Fate’Hasta La Vista’ FULL-ONLINE
[Review] BLUE-RAY Terminator: Dark Fate’Hasta La Vista’ FULL-ONLINE
Terminator: Dark Fate Review: James Cameron’s Franchise
Starring: Alicia Borrachero, Arlette Torres, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Björn Freiberg, Brett Azar, Cassandra Starr, Claudia Trujillo, Diego Boneta, Edward Furlong, Enrique Arce, Ferran Fernández, Fraser James, Gabriel Luna, Hadrian Howard, Linda Hamilton, Lorna Brown, Mackenzie Davis, Manuel Pacific, Mario de la Rosa, Natalia Reyes, Rochelle Neil, Samantha Coughlan, Stephanie Gil, Steven Cree, Tábata Cerezo, Tom Hopper, Tomy Alvarez, Tristán Ulloa
Summary: More than two decades have passed since Sarah Connor prevented Judgment Day, changed the future, and re-wrote the fate of the human race. Dani Ramos (Natalia Reyes) is living a simple life in Mexico City with her brother (Diego Boneta) and father when a highly advanced and deadly new Terminator — a Rev-9 (Gabriel Luna) — travels back… Expand
Director: Tim Miller
Genre(s): Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Rating: R
Runtime: 128 min
Summary: More than two decades have passed since Sarah Connor prevented Judgment Day, changed the future, and re-wrote the fate of the human race. Dani Ramos (Natalia Reyes) is living a simple life in Mexico City with her brother (Diego Boneta) and father when a highly advanced and deadly new Terminator — a Rev-9 (Gabriel Luna) — travels back… Expand
Director: Tim Miller
Genre(s): Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Rating: R
Runtime: 128 min
Terminator : Dark Fate — Sortie, E-Billet, Bande-annonce
Terminator: Dark Fate is a 2019 American science fiction action film directed by Tim Miller, with a screenplay by David Goyer, Justin Rhodes, and Billy Ray,[6] from a story by James Cameron, Charles H. Eglee, Josh Friedman, Goyer, and Rhodes. Cameron also produced, alongside David Ellison. It is the sixth installment in the Terminator franchise and a direct sequel to The Terminator (1984) and Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), while Cameron described Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009), Terminator Genisys (2015), and the television series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (2008–2009) as occurring in alternate timelines.[7]
The film stars Linda Hamilton returning in her role of Sarah Connor and Arnold Schwarzenegger reprising his role as a T-800 “Terminator”, reuniting the actors after 28 years. The cast includes Mackenzie Davis, Natalia Reyes, and Gabriel Luna as new characters. Set 25 years after the events of Terminator 2, the film sees the machines sending an advanced Terminator (Luna), designated Rev-9, back in time to 2020 to eliminate Dani Ramos (Reyes), whose fate is connected to the future. The Resistance also send Grace (Davis), an augmented soldier, back in time to defend Dani, while they are joined by Sarah Connor (Hamilton) and an aging T-800 Terminator (Schwarzenegger).
Film Terminator: Dark Fate — A voir dans les cinémas UGC
Hollywood devours its own in “Terminator: Dark Fate,” and another franchise bites the dust. Not just any franchise, either. The first two “Terminator” films were in a class by themselves — thrillingly original, dazzlingly conceived, and improbably stirring for their humanity. This one is in a different class — cobbled together by dunces in a last-ditch effort to wring revenue from a moribund concept. The plot makes no sense — time travel as multiverse Dada. Worse still, it renders meaningless the struggles that gave the first two films of the franchise an epic dimension. There’s yet another unborn hero who will save humanity from the robots in another future that’s yet to unfold, and a new set of characters notable mainly for their political correctness, plus a new Terminator, once again made of liquid-metal, whose liquidity is matched only by his vapidity.MORE FILM REVIEWS
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He’s a model Rev-9, played by Gabriel Luna with a succession of blank stares, narrow-eyed glowers and menacing leers that establish a threat, albeit a dull one, but don’t amount to what you might call a performance. And, as before, he’s all but indestructible, so there’s no suspense attached to his fate, only repetitive and grindingly mediocre action sequences in which the heroines — we’ll get to them in a moment — try to dismember his constantly re-membering body, or fry his refractory circuits. The person he has come to terminate is an
The dire future of machine rule, prophesied in the first “Terminator” way back in 1984, has been evaded, revised and reinstated in many sequels since then. Judgment Day was coming, until it was canceled. Or maybe just postponed? Skynet was going to obliterate humanity under its cybernetic boot, or maybe just squish us into obedience. John Connor was Christian Bale. Also Nick Stahl. His mother died of Leukemia. T-800 decided to be nice. He was elected governor of California. This is not “Star Wars.” The fans are pretty easygoing. Nothing is really canon
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