| Screen format: | Widescreen - 2.39 Widescreen - 2.39 Widescreen - 2.39 Widescreen - 2.39 |
| Audio track: | DTS HD Master Audio - English, French DTS HD Master Audio - English, French DTS HD Master Audio - English, French DTS HD Master Audio - English, French |
| DVD region code: | Region [unknown] Region [unknown] |
| Note: | Creating the Apocalypse - behind the physical effects
Humanity's last line of defense - the cast and characters
From pixels to picture - a look at the visual effects
Bringing Angels to earth: Picture-in-picture
Movie IQ+sync and BD-live connect you to real-time information on the cast, music, trivia and more while watching the movie! Creating the Apocalypse - behind the physical effects
Humanity's last line of defense - the cast and characters
From pixels to picture - a look at the visual effects
Bringing Angels to earth: Picture-in-picture
Movie IQ+sync and BD-live connect you to real-time information on the cast, music, trivia and more while watching the movie! Creating the Apocalypse - behind the physical effects
Humanity's last line of defense - the cast and characters
From pixels to picture - a look at the visual effects
Bringing Angels to earth: Picture-in-picture
Movie IQ+sync and BD-live connect you to real-time information on the cast, music, trivia and more while watching the movie! Creating the Apocalypse - behind the physical effects
Humanity's last line of defense - the cast and characters
From pixels to picture - a look at the visual effects
Bringing Angels to earth: Picture-in-picture
Movie IQ+sync and BD-live connect you to real-time information on the cast, music, trivia and more while watching the movie! |
to see them all.
Source:
AmazonAs pure check-your-head-at-the-door popcorn entertainment, the apocalyptic action-horror hybrid
Legion delivers in nearly every frame--its story of a band of strangers fighting an army of angels and demons for the fate of mankind is proudly loud, bullet riddled, and knee-deep in gore and CGI. That doesn't mean it's particularly good or even coherent--the story has renegade angel Michael (a glum Paul Bettany) come to the aid of diner owner Dennis Quaid (equally glum) and his patrons (a cross-section of stereotypes embodied by a capable cast, which includes Lucas Black, Charles S. Dutton, Tyrese Gibson, Kate Walsh, and Jon Tenney) as a host of heavenly and diabolical beings, dispatched by an angry God, descend on the diner with the intent of killing waitress Adrianne Palicki (
Friday Night Lights), whose unborn child may be the salvation of humanity. The orgy of special effects--endless hails of bullets and a menagerie of unpleasant demonic creatures, the most unsettling of which is the ice cream man (Doug Jones,
Hellboy)--is eye popping but ultimately repetitive, and since no character rises above a cipher in director Scott Stewart's script (cowritten with Peter Schink), the whole affair feels unwieldy and eventually tiresome under a barrage of hackneyed dialogue. Naturally,
Legion ends with the possibility of a sequel, though one wonders where the story can go after Armageddon.
--Paul Gaita Stills from Legion (Click for larger image)