Terminator: Salvation

Suitable for mature audiences 16 years and over.

Blu-ray (2009)

(avg. of 33 ratings)
 
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Terminator: Salvation on Blu-ray + District 9 on Blu-ray
List price: $39.98
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28.18% of people buy Terminator: Salvation and District 9 ~ Blu-ray.

Details

Re-released on
August 10th, 2011
Blu-ray Region
Region B
Length (Minutes)
115
Aspect Ratio
  • 2.35 : 1
Languages
English
Brand
Director
McG
Studio
All-time sales rank
Top 1000
Buy this and earn 120 Banana Points
Product ID
3196655

Description

The End Begins

Set in post-apocalyptic 2018, John Connor is the man fated to lead the human resistance against Skynet and its army of Terminators. But the future Connor was raised to believe in is altered in part by the appearance of Marcus Wright, a stranger whose last memory is of being on death row. Connor must decide whether Marcus has been sent from the future, or rescued from the past. As Skynet prepares its final onslaught, Connor and Marcus both embark on an odyssey that takes them into the heart of Skynet’s operations, where they uncover the terrible secret behind the possible annihilation of mankind.
 

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Customer reviews

 
Review by Jason on 24th August, 2011
5 stars "Great special effects, and packed with action!"

This is a must have on blu-ray. I consider movies of this magnitude as ‘wasted’ on standard tvs.

 
 
Preview by carl on 26th April, 2011
3 stars "Someone save this franchise please!"

I can tell you now Salvation is no ‘Terminator 2 Judgment Day’ (1991) – it pales in comparison. Comparisons aside, Salvation is a very average action film. Director McG knows how to direct and create some good action sequences. There are some good moments when the camera is in a helicopter, or a jeep, and you feel like you're on a virtual roller-coaster ride. The film has a variety of Terminator machines from killer bikes to harvesters, underwater terminators and even the classic T800s.

The action is the only element that holds the film together. Each action sequence moves the film along nicely, but there is a lack of the human factor. I didn't care much for John Connor (Christian Bale) or Kyle Reese (Anton Yelchin). I guess the suspense was absent due to the fact we already know Kyle Reese is in ‘The Terminator’ (1984) and John Connor has to become the leader of the resistance so we assume he can't die. John Connor was just angry the whole time; they don't show any other emotion or try to create some reason for us to care about him. The humans may as well be Terminators themselves. It's all a bit somber at times but after all it is set after Judgment Day in a post apocalyptic world with no Starbucks or McDonald's – you'd be mad too I guess.

The film focuses on Sam Worthington's cha­racter, Marcus Wright, a convict sentenced to death by lethal injection, who donates this body to science. Marcus awakens in 2018 arising from a defunct Skynet base. Marcus travels to Los Angeles where he bumps in to Kyle Reese, which is completely absurd. Marcus walked through a desert and then just happens to bump in to Kyle on the street in LA. Post apocalyptic or not, LA is huge – the chances of them crossing paths are nil. However, this is a movie about Terminators and time travel, so all reason is out the window. Marcus and Kyle hear John Conner on the radio (chance of ever happening 0) and decide to go to John Connor and join the resistance to take down Skynet.
McG has only ever made two action films – Charlie's Angels and Charlies Angels: Full Throttle. Both films are full of sparkly bubble gum action with pointless drivel, in between the fight scenes. Terminator Salvation has action which is far superior; it's dark and gritty and done on a massive scale, but you get the same result as Charlie's Angels, where the film becomes all about a big action piece and forgets about everything else. I wanted a whole film with story, plot, good characters, emotion, suspense and epic action. I did like the look of the film which is dark and gritty. The sets and environments looked good, especially the Skynet factory, and I loved seeing the Terminators again. Stan Winston is a legend for creating such a menacing fearful machine. Overall I felt Terminator Salvation was made with the word “trilogy” in mind – it was like they didn't put everything they had in to the movie, which in my opinion lets the film down a lot and makes it feel unfinished. I think I'll go watch T2 Judgment Day on Blu-ray again, God I love that movie.

 
 
Preview by Nathan on 19th April, 2011
5 stars "Terminal action all the way!"

The movie kind of drops you in it with the storyline, so you have to work to piece the history/future together. There's no dull bits in the entire movie – pretty much full on action! Leads are good, and effects brilliant.

Movie quality is very good, and the sound will blow you away if you have the right audio equipment.

One last thing – they should know ordinary weapons have no affect on Terminators!

 
 
Preview by Stephen on 17th August, 2010
3 stars "Great special effects. Broken story line."

Sit down, clear your mind of all the terminators before, and you will be entertained by high action and big robots. But just as T3 wandered off into sensationalism (fun but not inspiring), Terminator Salvation does not make a satisfying conclusion (if that is what it was supposed to be) to the T1 and T2 series, or even if you watched the Sarah Conner Chronicles.

Recommended for the curious.

 

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