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Title:
Terminator Salvation: Director’s Cut: Digital Copy Special Edition
Media:
Blu-ray Disc
Blu-ray
Disc Region: A
Genre:
Sci-Fi Action Thriller
Starring:
Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Anton Yelchin, Moon Bloodgood, Bryce Dallas
Howard, Common, and Helena Bonham Carter
Writers:
John Brancato and Michael Ferris
Director:
McG
Extras:
Maximum Movie Mode With Director McG, including picture-in-picture focus point
featurettes, Storyboard Comparisons and Terminator Mythology Timeline, The
Moto-Terminator and Re-Forging The Future Featurettes, Digital Copy
for iTunes and Windows Media Player Devices (Expires December 1, 2010)
Languages:
English DTS-HD MA 5.1 and French (Dubbed In Quebec) and Spanish Language Dolby
Digital 5.1 Surround Sound For Theatrical Version Only.
Subtitles:
English Subtitles For The Deaf and Hearing Impaired and French and Spanish
Language Subtitles
Packaging:
Three-Disc Elite Blue BD Case Within A Glossy Slipcase
Chapter
Stops: 27
Sound:
DTS-HD MA 5.1 theatrical Surround Sound and Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Year
of Theatrical Release: 2009/Blu-ray Disc Release: 2009
Theatrical
Distributor: Warner Brothers
Home
Video Distributor: Warner Home Video
MPAA
Rating: R For Director’s Cut & PG-13 For Theatrical Cut
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
In
the year 2018, the War Against the Machines rages on and John Connor, the
prophesized leader of the resistance, has his followers and then those in
command who still doubt his role in the war other than seeing him as an asset.
On the eve of what resistance command believes to be a miracle that will end the
war once and for all, Connor is troubled because events his mother warned him
about have been altered. In destroying Cyberdine Systems more than twenty years
before, all they managed to do was delay Judgment Day, not stop it. His
mother’s tapes no longer answer lingering questions about an altered future
that has brought about the advent of the T-800 faster than was predicted, left a
cyborg that believes he is human as a prisoner, and put a young Kyle Reese in
danger. If Connor can’t rescue him before the Resistance attack, the future
will be reset again, but in order to do so he must put his trust in the captured
Cyborg, who is his only chance to get into Skynet Central and discover the truth
about what is happening.
By
this point in the Terminator franchise, the logic factor regarding a
malevolent artificial intelligence repeatedly failing to kill off the one person
destined to defeat it has to be chucked out the door because I can’t imagine
how humanity could survive a global nuclear holocaust and then run around in
what I imagine would be terribly radioactive remains of former American cities
and not die from radiation poisoning. In the original and even the second film,
we were only given enough information about the future to suspend our disbelief,
but now we have to believe a teenage boy and a mute little girl can rig traps
strong enough to crush a robot in a burned out Los Angeles. I’m sorry, I
don’t believe they would survive just being in a post nuclear LA let alone
being strong enough to rig traps carrying debris heavy enough to crush a
Terminator, a robot that with conventional weapons used against it by trained
military personnel is hard to take down. So
my first advice is don’t think about the logic of the situation because in the
end this is a popcorn movie and while it is somewhat tainted by Christian
Bale’s recorded audio meltdown that was brilliantly parodied on Family Guy
months before the film was released, I think Terminator Salvation is
definitely one of the better summer sci-fi action pictures of the year and far
more entertaining than Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines. In fact if
there was a bit more character development and a bit of screenplay tweaking you
could have gone straight from Terminator 2: Judgment Day to Terminator
Salvation and I think the franchise as a whole would be better off for it.
Christian
Bale, Sam Worthington, and Anton Yelchin are the standouts in the film with
everyone else just kind of playing second fiddle. There is a fantastic cameo in
the film that elevates it immediately higher than if it were not present, and
McG is already used to working with action and effects pictures from his two
entertaining Charlie’s Angels films and thus he keeps the pace going
and throws in enough cool terminators and some genuine drama to keep one glued
to their seat. In short, Terminator Salvation is a step in the right
direction for the franchise, which got splintered a bit by the alternate
timeline created in the Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles TV
series, which launched itself after the events of the second film and ignored
the third film completely. Now that that TV series is over, I think we can
pretty much accept the four feature films as cannon and hope that the next two
films to follow in what is planned as a second trilogy will give us a
satisfactory resolution to the series as a whole, which the second film
delivered already on it’s own had they not made another sequel.
Warner
Home Video’s Blu-ray Disc edition of Terminator Salvation is nothing
short of excellent. It contains two beautiful transfers on separate Blu-ray
Discs. I believe the Director’s Cut is only available on Blu-ray and is
approximately three minutes longer. Both versions are presented in widescreen
1080p/24fps VC-1 encoded (2.4:1) aspect ratio. The Director’s Cut for some
reason appeared darker to me in terms of overall picture quality so much that I
had to shut every light out in order to appreciate the detail, which is
something I usually never have to do when it comes to screening a Blu-ray Disc,
DVD, or watching television in general. The theatrical cut wasn’t too dark at
all and I found I could have the lights on all around me and not have feel as
though I was missing any detail. Both versions feature an excellent English DTS
Digital 5.1 High Definition Lossless Master Audio Soundtrack that is one of the
best I have ever heard. It’s loud, it’s gritty, and it brings one right into
the world of the film the way sound can capture the imagination even in the days
when there were no televisions and radio was the primary form of home
entertainment. The theatrical cut also features French (Dubbed In Quebec) and
Spanish Language Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Soundtracks and both include English
Subtitles for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired as well as French and Spanish
Language Subtitles encoded as options.
The
Director’s Cut Blu-ray Disc is BD-Live enabled and the first 100,000
registrants using the BD-Live enabled disc will hear the first ever
audio-enabled Live Community Screening and ask and hear McG answer live
questions during the screening, which will occur on December 5, 2009. Other
BD-Live features include a compilation of ten viral videos from the “Resist or
Be Terminated” alternate reality game revealing SKYNET’s secret plans, the
first episode of the Terminator Salvation Machinima Series and the first
issue of the official movie prequel digital comic.
The
Blu-ray Disc containing the Theatrical Cut has Maximum Movie mode where Director
McG literally appears on screen and discusses the film, even freeze framing it
at specific points to reveal interesting technical and anecdotal elements. The
revelation of the unfilmed alternate ending for the film would have been
interesting, but I think it would have destroyed the series in a way that would
leave the fans more shell shocked than the ending of Alien 3.
Storyboard Comparisons and a Terminator Mythology Timeline are also
enabled with specific picture-in-picture focus points available to be viewed
separately in full 1080p HD (1.78:1) aspect ratios. These featurettes are listed
as follows:
Digital
Destruction (2:30)
Enlisting
The Air Force (2:48)
Molten
Metal And The Science Of Simulation (2:09)
Building
The Gas Station (2:52)
Creating
The VLA Attack (2:46)
Exploding
Serena’s Lab In Miniature (2:38)
Hydrobots
(2:19)
An
Icon Returns (3:01)
Terminator
Factory (2:17)
Stan
Winston Shop (3:03)
Napalm
Blast (2:46)
Additional featurettes covering the making of the film, specifically re-imagining the look of the future war (19:00) and a featurette covering the Moto-Terminators (8:33) wrap up the extra value features on the Theatrical Cut Disc and when watching the film in Maximum Movie Mode, the running time length increases to nearly two hours and two minutes.
The
third disc is a DVD containing a Digital Copy for iTunes and Windows Media Player Devices (Expires December
1, 2010). Terminator
Salvation: Director’s Cut: Digital Copy Special Edition will debut on
Blu-ray Disc on Tuesday December 1, 2009 courtesy of Warner Home Video and
despite any logic flaws within the film itself, I still found it to be very
enjoyable and I highly recommend it.
©
Copyright 2009 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.

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