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Post by beautifuladdiction on Jun 24, 2020 19:23:17 GMT -5
It looks like it'll be awesome 🤗🤗🤗 i just don't know how covid closings will effect release, but I'm so excited for this film!
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Post by elsa on Jun 25, 2020 11:07:06 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jun 25, 2020 13:53:00 GMT -5
That trailer is a slightly different from the first one and I think it looks better in the cgi department.
i can’t help feel so bad that the film will not get a chance at a normal release due to the virus. I still hope they will be able to delay it again.
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Post by elsa on Jun 25, 2020 14:10:11 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jun 26, 2020 16:27:32 GMT -5
Ok, I am getting tired of Warner Brothers dropping the release of Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet“ the same weekend as Greenland. This just announced
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Warner Bros. may have to keep postponing 'Tenet' even longer. Scheduled now for A Wednesday release on August 12th.
The film will now be competing with #BillandTedFaceTheMusic and Gerard Butler's #GreenlandMovie, coming August 14th.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 20, 2020 19:31:43 GMT -5
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Post by elsa on Jul 21, 2020 5:25:17 GMT -5
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Post by beautifuladdiction on Jul 23, 2020 15:43:16 GMT -5
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Post by elsa on Jul 24, 2020 4:58:50 GMT -5
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Post by elsa on Jul 24, 2020 14:31:18 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jul 24, 2020 15:02:58 GMT -5
Release date change for the U.S. according to,Deadline Hollywood.....
boy, this virus is starting to be a “disaster” to the movie business. Hope the film does well in the first offshore releases and the reviews are good.
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Post by elsa on Jul 25, 2020 2:43:30 GMT -5
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Post by elsa on Jul 26, 2020 17:11:27 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2020 19:59:37 GMT -5
I just saw on Wikipedia Info for Greenland that the budget for the movie was $47 million, I am really skeptical of this amount since Angel Has Fallen’s budget was $40 million. But if it is true, I can now understand why they are determined to release the film this summer starting in foreign markets and later (Sept. 27th) in the U. S. I sure hope the virus will diminish ASAP.
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Post by beautifuladdiction on Jul 27, 2020 20:27:07 GMT -5
Amen! Can't wait to get back in the theater to see this gifted man on the big screen! 🤗🤗🤗
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Post by elsa on Jul 30, 2020 12:14:59 GMT -5
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Post by lolita on Jul 30, 2020 12:38:18 GMT -5
Someone at jj said she is close to Belgium and they have been on lockdown so she is just wondering what kind of effect the movie showing will have on the public attendance. I have a feeling they are trying to make some money before it may be forced to ppv or cd showings. I think that Gerry needs to find that horseshoe he lost. Beauty i love his curls but i still would love to see him as a silver fox.
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Post by beautifuladdiction on Jul 30, 2020 13:32:06 GMT -5
Someone at jj said she is close to Belgium and they have been on lockdown so she is just wondering what kind of effect the movie showing will have on the public attendance. I have a feeling they are trying to make some money before it may be forced to ppv or cd showings. I think that Gerry needs to find that horseshoe he lost. Beauty i love his curls but i still would love to see him as a silver fox. me too! Silver fox with the lush curls 🤗 i doubt we'll get that anytime soon, but we can dream 😊 and continue to enjoy him just as he is ❤❤❤
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2020 12:16:28 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Aug 3, 2020 16:34:09 GMT -5
Another review from France. 3 1/2 stars out of 5 Google translation— leschroniquesdecliffhanger.com/2020/08/03/greenland-le-dernier-refuge-critique/SYNOPSIS: A comet is about to crash into Earth and cause an unprecedented cataclysm. John Garrity (Gerard Butler) decides to embark on a perilous journey with his ex-wife Allison (Morena Baccarin) and their son Nathan to reach the last refuge on Earth safe from disaster. As the urgency becomes absolute and disasters rampantly follow one another, the Garrities will witness the best and the worst from a panicked humanity in the midst of this chaos. In these times of dark rooms deserted (by viewers as much as by the movies), it is rare to see American products formatted in summer blockbusters, especially since the high expectations on which the studios were banking are mostly carried over. So, if Mulan and Tenet - among others - have not yet found their places in theaters, we see a disaster film point the tip of its nose to offer the dose of action that the general public is looking for in these holiday periods and strong heat. Greenland tells the story of John Garrity, an engineer specializing in building construction in Atlanta. His marriage to Allison seems to be on the wane, leading him to live far away from their diabetic son, Nathan. But the family will reunite when a comet capable of decimating the planet is sighted. On their way to a hope of survival in a hypothetical refuge, the Garrities will face anarchy that suddenly roars, when the world realizes it is on the brink of death. The first thing to note about Greenland is that he chooses to focus his perspective on this family, on these characters. It is less a question of offering great spectacle and sensationalism to the spectator eager for fireworks than of studying humans, above all. Study humans in a context of chaos, oscillating between moments of benevolence and brotherhood as much as anarchy, egoism and destructive madness of which humanity is capable when faced with its own end. Focusing on his characters, Ric Roman Waugh, the film's director, adapts his staging to create an intimate atmosphere around this somewhat dysfunctional family to clearly establish the bonds they have between them. Greenland chooses more or less the same axis as Spielberg when he put Tom Cruise and his family in the face of a particularly vehement alien attack in his adaptation of The War of the Worlds, so much so that the film seems to be inspired by it, without returning so far in a repetition. This way of making the protagonists travel like a road movie allows them to meet a plethora of secondary characters, each featuring a different side of humanity, allegorizing either what is best done or what is happening. done worse. But Ric Roman Waugh precisely avoids falling into the practically systematic Manichaeism of this kind of approach by finding a fair enough balance, making the whole rich in terms of emotions. So yes, Greenland is a pure Hollywood product that meets a set of specifications and decades of blockbuster action, and it is not without clichés and scriptwriting facilities. Certain scenes which are intended to be very emotional are sometimes found a little too underlined, even if it means going into pathos at certain times. But then the film constantly reminds us that he has above all the will to be human, and we end up forgiving these excesses to get caught up in the emotion that emerges from them. In terms of action, the “disaster film” quota is full. So it's true, we are not in an Armageddon or in a Roland Emmerich film not hesitating at any point to flashy sensationalism to sustain the viewer coming for their dose of mass destruction. In Greenland, the action is disseminated at certain key points of the film, making the scenes more impactful then, because they are rarer. And although the impending disaster is the center of interest of the characters and the spectators, the camera always remains on its protagonists. They are the heart of the film, not this comet. And that also goes through the play of its actors, who create an identification and release a humanity as radiant as brutal. Heading the bill are Morena Baccarin, Gerard Butler and young Roger Dale Floyd playing the Garrities, a family who will find bonds during this race to survival. A disaster film with intimate questions more than a fireworks display, Greenland is a very pleasant moment, which ticks the boxes it has to fill, being a fresh and impactful summer blockbuster. It sometimes pulls too much on the rope with emotion, special effects often suffer from a lack of budget, but Greenland is still a human-centric disaster movie, about the awful things it can do when in panic.
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