DOOMSDAY

I've just watched this movie. Doomsday, I have to say it's really not really enjoyable movie. But still in a good rate for you to watch it. It's really funny. Btw, I watched it with Ton2. At first, i had no idea of watching this movie. But, Ton2 asked everyone who met him to watch this movie together. Since I had no plan to do, I went there with him. watching with him means that you can help laughing all the time. wkwkw. it's really nice. maybe you should watch it too.

In the beginning of the movie, You'll think that this movie is almost have the same plot as resident evil. like the virus, and a spooky town. all of that, But actually, it's so far away. Too much. stop me talking. Here are the review of the movie :

“If you’re hungry, here’s a piece of your friend,” snarls a jailer in the post-apocalyptic action picture “Doomsday,” sliding a plateful of charbroiled man-flesh to a captive.

If that line fails to make the film’s midnight-movie ambitions clear, the British writer and director Neil Marshall offers many other clues: hands, legs and heads lopped off in bloody close-ups; a nonstop soundtrack of adrenaline-stoking rock ’n’ roll; a shot of a cute little bunny blasted into rabbit stew by a remote-controlled sentry cannon.

“Doomsday” is set in the near future, years after the British government quarantined a plague-ravaged Scotland and let its inhabitants die out. The decision is believed to have killed the disease along with the Scottish population, but when it surfaces in London, officials reveal that a hardy band of Glasgow inhabitants survived the epidemic and might hold clues to a cure.

Enter the stoic, one-eyed mercenary Eden Sinclair (Rhona Mitra, of the television show “Nip/Tuck”), who is ostensibly entrusted with leading a team of soldiers into Glasgow on a mission to find a doctor-turned-political leader named Kane (Malcolm McDowell) and learn how the Glasgow contingent survived. Really, though, Eden is mainly on hand to impersonate another sci-fi hero, Snake Plissken from John Carpenter’s “Escape From New York,” and to punch, kick, run and shoot her way through situations shamelessly cribbed from Mr. Carpenter’s film, George Miller’s “Mad Max” trilogy, “Aliens” and other dystopian touchstones.

“Doomsday” has an appealing punk-rock sneer, but aside from a few clever music cues — including a Fine Young Cannibals song that accompanies a deranged bacchanal given by fine young cannibals — swagger is, unfortunately, its only notable quality.

The film’s bellowing, Mohawk-topped villain, Sol (Craig Conway), is a personality-free retread of Vernon Wells’s memorable Wez from “The Road Warrior.” Major supporting characters — including a squad leader, played by Adrian Lester, and a gruff yet caring boss, portrayed by Bob Hoskins — are so lifeless they could have been cast with inflatable dolls. The final chase, modeled on an epic set-piece from Mr. Miller’s second “Mad Max” movie, is likewise a bust, substituting gore, shaky camerawork and chop-chop editing for Mr. Miller’s symphonic build-up and release.

Keep looking of the soldier. One of the DDS. There is a cute guy. A clue to find who he is. He survived in the end of the story. hehe. =P

want to watch the trailer? Click here.

-auReL-

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