a5c7b9f00b A veteran assigned to extract Earth's remaining resources begins to question what he knows about his mission and himself. One of the few remaining drone repairmen assigned to Earth, its surface devastated after decades of war with the alien Scavs, discovers a crashed spacecraft with contents that bring into question everything he believed about the war, and may even put the fate of mankind in his hands. Hate to say it but it's not worth the watch kiddies. Nothing new here move along, move along. Basically someone took a bunch of tried and true sci-fi movies/plots (some of them already LAME to start off with mind you) strung them together with plenty of other Hollywood clichés and threw in a good amount of "visually stunning"(cough, cough…bad CGI) scenery and called it a movie.<br/><br/>This is a slow and boring film period, no other two ways around it. Just bad, it should make ALL those involved with it feel bad and throw up… if it weren't for the fact that it made a lot of money for some of those involved! Life is way too short, don't waste 2+ hours on this garbage, and if you're curious or inclined to torturing yourself and decide to watch it anyway for god's sake do NOT pay to see it in theaters wait for the DVD. Just finished watching the film for a second time through. First time through at an extreme screen cinema and the second at home. At both locations the film was fantastic in terms of visual and sfx. The film was very well directed with a range of creative and visually pleasing shots and film techniques. The storyline itself was great with plenty of exciting twists and turns in the storyline. Admittedly, the first hour is not as exciting and the second - however it worked to explain the storyline which was one of the greatest aspects of the film. Definitely a must see - even after my second viewing I was able to enjoy and learn more about the film. A moderately clever dystopian mindbender with a gratifying human pulse, despite some questionable narrative developments along the way. here] First of all, because Julia had to cross a much larger distance than Jack. But there are more factors. When Jack released Julia, he said they would be sent into the orbit of the Earth. At this time both the Tet and the Odyssey are near Jupiter. The ejected segment containing Julia and the rest of the crew in delta sleep was set for course towards Earth. The Tet captured the Odyssey's command module with Jack and Victoria in it, and kept on moving towards Earth at unknown speed. It did not encounter the sleep model with Julia in it, or it simply didn't bother with it. The Tet started producing mass amounts of clones of Jack and Victoria. After it reached Earth, the war took place, with the clones used as soldiers. Society and much of Earth was destroyed as a result, and what remained of humanity went underground. The sleep module may have taken months or years to reach Earth, depending on its speed. Unmanned Earth vessels from the last three decades could make the trip within 6 years, depending on their speed and flightpath. It is therefore plausible that the sleep module did not need the entire 60 years for the trip home, and spent several years or perhaps decades in orbit around Earth; the Tet may have continued to ignore it, or didn't notice it between all the satellites also orbiting the Earth.<br/><br/>In the meantime, the remnants of humanity learned of the ejected sleep module still orbiting the planet. Sixty years after the war, they used the remains of the Empire State Building to transmit a landing signal to it, forcing it to crash-land within their territory. Since the module responded quite fast to the signal (within a day after activation), it is likely it was already waiting in orbit rather than just coincidentally arriving at Earth. When Jack flies back to the Tet, it is orbiting the Earth, which is a much shorter voyage than from Earth to Jupiter. Because it simply cannot understand human nature. The Tet is an artificial life form, which can anticipate human responses to certain extents, but it can never comprehend the emotions behind them. It mistakenly thought it had learned all about humans from studying the data aboard the Odyssey.<br/><br/>That's why it took Jack Harper and cloned him by the thousands: with no memories of his earlier life, it expected Jack could be programmed to be the perfect weapon to wage its war. By thinking it understood him, it thought it could have absolute control over him. Which was true during the war, when the army of Jacks nearly wiped out humanity. The Tet probably assumed that the remaining people would fear the sight of him forever, and never reach out to any of the Jacks remaining on Earth as caretakers. So the Tet could easily fool Jack into thinking that the humans in disguise were remaining Scavs.<br/><br/>Its flaw was that it did not expect Jack to retain one vital memory, one of the love for his wife. It was so deeply rooted in his emotional being that it would resurface in every clone of Jack, given enough time and opportunity (notice that Jack from Tower 52 freezes temporarily at the sight of Julia and has a sudden flashback of the Empire State Building, implying he remembers her and his proposal as well). Even more so, the capacity to love also extends to all things from the Earth, its environment, music and culture. Despite having no memories, Jack still feels that Earth is his home. The Tet did not realize that a love for the Earth is so deeply rooted in humanity that it cannot simply be "erased" (according to Victoria from Tower 52, Jack 52 also had a similar desire to stay on Earth).<br/><br/>So the flaw in the Tet's plan started to backfire when General Beech (Morgan Freeman) noticed Jack 49 picking up a book, and saw him defending the people in the pods against the drone; this convinced him that despite everything, Jack had retained his humanity. The Tet never knew that Jack was cooperating with the other humans, and didn't expect him to. Even when Jack learned the truth about the Scavs and the Tet, the Tet was convinced Jack was no longer human, and thought it could keep his allegiance by promising him things. Nor did the Tet understand the true meaning of death. It simply thinks that all humans have an instinctive urge to stay alive, and does not calculate that Jack may sacrifice himself for Earth and its people. Even when the Tet seems to suspect something is wrong as Jack proceeds into the object's interior, and suspects he might be lying, it ultimately accepts as true his genuine desire for humanity to survive.<br/><br/>As for the Tet not suspecting that Jack may be carrying the drones' missing fuel cells: it had ordered the drones to follow Jack's trail to the humans' secret hide-out, and may have assumed that the drones would wipe out the entire human resistance, along with the fuel cells. Again, since Tet did not expect Jack to work with the humans, it did not know that Jack had helped them defeat the drones and obtained the fuel cells. While similarities can be found between the two works, Kosinski wrote the story for Oblivion in 2005 after moving to Los Angeles, but the writers' strike in 2007 prevented him from shopping around the treatment to studios, so he had Radical Comics begin turning the project into a graphic novel. The unreleased graphic novel was later used to pitch the movie to film studios. (Source.) Moon was released in 2009. The shoulder belt for Jack's weapon was covering his old tower number for the majority of the time that he was at Tower 52. Also, she had no reason to notice it. As far as she was aware, he was the only Jack, and she wouldn't bother to make a conscious effort to notice a number that had never changed before. It is not made clear in the film whether or not the Tet is acting autonomously, unbeholden to any alien species, or performing duties assigned to it by, or on behalf of, some aliens who might've created it. The film establishes that the Tet utilizes deuterium extracted from Earth's seawater to power itself and its drones, but the audience does not learn if this fuel energy-source is also being collected and harvested for delivery back to some extraterrestrial point of origin. It is also possible that the Tet is now a self-sustaining AI with only the intention of survival for itself, moving from one world to the next much like a parasite. This is what Malcolm hinted at. The answer to this question is mostly left to viewer speculation. It's Elvis of course. "Bob" is short for bobble head. It is another link to Jack's humanity, just as the objects in his cabin were. Absolution movie hindi free downloadMarvel One-Shot: Item 47 download movie freeAssemble! Japan Stage tamil dubbed movie free downloadDownload the Whitewater: Part 1 full movie tamil dubbed in torrentthe Sand Sharks downloadthe Guardians of the Galaxy downloadIron Man 2 full movie in hindi free downloadA New Brillance! tamil dubbed movie free downloadLegend of the Gun hd full movie downloadtamil movie The Firm free download
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