Terminator 2: Judgment Day

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Product Summary
UPC: 00012236179146
Release Date: 1/19/2009
Buy.com Sku: 63985495
Item#: M2ECKY


Arnold Schwarzenegger returns as The Terminator in this explosive action-adventure spectacle. Now he's one of the good guys, sent back in time to protect John Connor, the boy destined to lead the freedom fighters of the future. Linda Hamilton reprises her role as Sarah Connor, John's mother, a quintessential survivor who has been institutionalized for her warning of the nuclear holocaust she knows is inevitable. Together, the threesome must find a way to stop the ultimate enemy -- the T-1000, the most lethal Terminator ever created. Co- written, produced and directed by James Cameron (The Terminator, Aliens, Titanic), this visual tour de force is also a touching human story of survival.

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UMD, Universal Media Disc, is a brand-new and groundbreaking optical storage medium, designed for the high speed and efficient delivery of digital entertainment content that can store up to 1.8 GB of digital data on a 60mm disc -- or an entire feature film on a single UMD video. All UMD DVDs are produced in Widescreen and encoded using advanced AVC compression. UMD for PSP will play on the new PlayStation Portable handheld entertainment system.

Specifications

  • Diameter: 60 mm
  • Maximum Capacity: 1.8GB (Single-sided, dual layer)
  • Laser wavelength: 660nm (Red laser)

  •  
    "Brutally beautiful, darkly comic sci-fi...that is macho in the extreme, but has a female sensibility at heart...Just try and stop it."  Joe Brown, The Washington Post
    "...one hell of a wild ride, a Twilight of the Gods that takes no prisoners and leaves audiences desperate for mercy."  Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times
    "...imagines things you wouldn't even be likely to dream and gets these visions onto the screen with a seamlessness that's mind-boggling."  Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle
    "A great movie...A pop epiphany, marking that commercially creative point where the power of Hollywood meets the purity of myth."  Rick Groen, The Globe and Mail
    "As with "Aliens," director James Cameron has again taken a first rate science fiction film and crafted a sequel that's in some ways more impressive..."  Variety

     
    Awards

    MTV Award (1992)
    Arnold Schwarzenegger, Winner, Best Male Performance

    Oscar (1992)
    Dennis Muren, et. al., Winner, Best Effects, Visual Effects

    MTV Award (1992)
    Edward Furlong, Winner, Best Breakthrough Performance

    Oscar (1992)
    Gary Rydstrom, Gloria S. Borders, Winner, Best Effects, Sound Effects Editing

    British Academy Awards (1992)
    Lee Orloff, et. al., Winner, Best Sound

    MTV Award (1992)
    Linda Hamilton, Winner, Best Female Performance/Most Desirable Female

    British Academy Awards (1992)
    Stan Winston, et. al., Winner, Best Special Visual Effects

    Oscar (1992)
    Stan Winston, Jeff Dawn, Winner, Best Makeup

    MTV Award (1992)
    Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Winner, Best Action Sequence
    Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Winner, Best Movie

    People's Choice (1992)
    Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Winner, Favorite Motion Picture

    Oscar (1992)
    Tom Johnson, et. al., Winner, Best Sound
     

     
    Professional Reviews
    Rolling Stone 8 of 10
    A kinder, gentler terminator. What an affront. In 1984, director-writer James Cameron gave Arnold Schwarzenegger the role of his career, as a killer cyborg sent from the future to murder Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) before she gives birth to a son who will lead a revolt against the ruling army of machines. "I'll be back," said Schwarzenegger. Now he is back, but reprogrammed as a goody-goody to protect Sarah's son, John Connor, played by fourteen-year-old Edward Furlong. The bad Terminator (Robert Patrick) is a newer model -- a hunk of liquid metal in human form (he looks like an Oscar with ears) -- out to waste John and clear the way for nuclear war on August 29th, 1997...John doesn't like killing, so Ah-nold's Mr. Softie merely shoots the bad guys in the kneecaps. He even shows compassion. "What's wrong with your eyes?" he asks John as the boy cries. Soon he's the first cyborg to learn the meaning of a tear...Schwarzenegger has fun saying things like "Chill out, dickwad" and "Hasta la vista, baby." But the star's quips are predictable, the stock in trade of an icon for hire. It's Cameron's show; he's the reigning king of movie pow, with dark wit and a poet's eye for mayhem. T2 cost a reported $100 million, and you can actually see where the money went...Still, the film's relentless pummeling grows wearying at 135 minutes. The first Terminator, a half-hour shorter, was leaner and meaner. Cameron and co-writer William Wisher saddle the game Hamilton with too many rants about peace. Cameron is not skilled at preaching (a similar moral stance marred the climax of The Abyss). And the good Terminator's cornball farewell feels out of place for Schwarzenegger and the film. It's the equivalent of making a sequel to The Silence of the Lambs in which Hannibal the Cannibal becomes a vegetarian. - Peter Travers
     
    Chicago Sun-Times 9 of 10
    In "Terminator 2: Judgment Day," the future once again comes hunting to kill John Connor. Though the world after the nuclear holocaust of 1997 is ruled by machines, a single man can still make a difference - and that man is Connor, who is a youngster as the movie opens but is destined to grow up into the leader of the human resistance movement against the cyborgs...From the opening chase scene - in which young Connor, on a fast motorcycle, outruns T-1000, at the wheel of a semi - "Terminator 2" develops a close relationship between the young boy and the good Terminator. Before long young Connor even discovers that Schwarzenegger is programmed to follow his instructions, and so he orders the awesome machine to stop killing people. The result is a neat twist on the tradition of the Schwarzenegger special effects film; this time, instead of corpses littering the screen, the Arnold character shoots to maim or frighten...Schwarzenegger's genius as a movie star is to find roles that build on, rather than undermine, his physical and vocal characteristics. Here he becomes the straight man in a human drama - and in a human comedy, too, as the kid tells him to lighten up and stop talking like a computer. After the kid's mother is freed from the mental home, the threesome work together to defeat T-1000, while at the same time creating an unlikely but effective family unit...The key element in any action picture, I think, is a good villain..."Terminator 2" has one, along with an intriguing hero and fierce heroine, and a young boy who is played by Furlong with guts and energy. The movie responds to criticisms of excessive movie violence by tempering the Terminator's blood lust, but nobody, I think, will complain that it doesn't have enough action. - Roger Ebert
     
      
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