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2020.05.30
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カテゴリ:カテゴリ未分類

Director=Robert Rodriguez;
Actor=Jennifer Connelly;
;
writer=Laeta Kalogridis, James Cameron;
Year=2019;
average ratings=7,5 of 10


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Distributor Twentieth Century Fox See full company information
Opening $28, 525, 613 3, 790
theaters Budget $170, 000, 000 Release Date Feb 14, 2019
-
May 9, 2019 MPAA PG-13 Running Time 2 hr 2 min Genres Action
Adventure
Sci-Fi
Thriller In Release 321 days/45 weeks Widest Release 3, 802 theaters
IMDbPro
See more details at IMDbPro.
Part 2 kab aayega.
Awesome, Stunning, cant wait.


I do not stand by in the presence of evil.
I cant believe all of Alitas body is animated. I thought it was just the eyes. A job well done 🙌.
Kinda reminds me of Ghost in the Shell. Looks good, though.
Haven't seen anything like this. Awesome.
Today is my 7th time watching the same movie about Alita. The movie is really cool. Waiting for a sequel :D.


We will be interested to know your opinion or version of the video clips.
Hey T I hired endgame out.
Movie ã‚リータ バトル・エンジà la page.
When I saw the trailer I know I must see this movie, the movie is so good i've actually watched it over and over and over. my best movie of all time so far.
With the use of H.264, bit rate savings of 50% or more compared to MPEG-2 Part 2 are reported.
We would be very grateful.
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Movie ã‚リータ バトル・エンジa à z.
What if we could use those snapchat face filters in a feature film? Say no more fam.
I'm not sure this made enough money for them to make a I really hope we get Alita 2.
It seems I am not the only one watching the trailer after watching the movie.
I will start by saying that I took my 12-year-old daughter (a huge manga fan) to this and she liked it- but didn't love it as much as Wonder Woman or Captain Marvel. As for me, aside from the cool effects and a couple fun action sequences, I was pretty bored. The story was predictable and I just didn't feel that strongly about any of the characters. I cry pretty easily at movies, but the moments that were supposed to affect me emotionally were just ho-hum. I can't understand how this movie is being held up as something groundbreaking for female heroes. Alita is animated to have the male ideal large eyes, small waist, etc., which is the manga style- but how come she's the only one done in this style? The character herself is built by a man, falls for the first boy she sees, and is willing to die for him (and why? The main villain is a man. There are a couple of other token female characters, but the overwhelming majority are male (like usual. Unfortunately nothing groundbreaking in the story or characters. I was disappointed and have no desire to see this film again.




Movie ジãƒãƒžãƒ³ã‚¸ã€€ãƒã‚¯ã‚¹ãƒˆãƒ»ãƒ¬à l'accueil.


Loved the movie, one of the best sci-fi movie I've watched in a while. F#k Marvel trash.


After watching this movie im already waiting for a sequel.


Bought. No regrets. One of my favorite movies now.

Movie ã‚リータ バトル・エンジà l'accueil


I looked at the Title of this movie and already knew I wasn't going to like it, when I watched it, it proved me right, First of all, Alita is terrifying, her eyes make me super uncomfortable and she doesn't act or look like a human witch makes me more disturbed, second, i was cringing at the movie the whole time i watched, so many of the scenes made me cringe it was impossible to count, Third, the story was just a cookie cutter hero story and was very boring, the characters were so unlikable too, please avoid watching this movie with children as it will terrify them into months worth of nightmares, and don't watch it in general, you could watch another one of the infinite action movies and it's just the same story.




Imagine how great the movie is when the movie feels like its 30 mins even though its 2 hours long.

From visionary filmmakers James Cameron (AVATAR) and Robert Rodriguez (SIN CITY), comes ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL, an epic adventure of hope and empowerment. When Alita (Rosa Salazar) awakens with no memory of who she is in a future world she does not recognize, she is taken in by Ido (Christoph Waltz), a compassionate doctor who realizes that somewhere in this abandoned cyborg shell is the heart and soul of a young woman with an extraordinary past. As Alita learns to navigate her new life and the treacherous streets of Iron City, Ido tries to shield her from her mysterious history while her street-smart new friend Hugo (Keean Johnson) offers instead to help trigger her memories. But it is only when the deadly and corrupt forces that run the city come after Alita that she discovers a clue to her past – she has unique fighting abilities that those in power will stop at nothing to control. If she can stay out of their grasp, she could be the key to saving her friends, her family and the world she’s grown to love.
Directed By Robert Rodriguez
Screenplay By James Cameron & Laeta Kalogridis
Based on the Graphic Novel (“Manga”) Series: “Gunnm” By Yukito Kishiro
Produced By James Cameron, Jon Landau
Cast
Rosa Salazar,
Christoph Waltz,
Jennifer Connelly,
Mahershala Ali,
Ed Skrein,
Jackie Earle Haley,
Keean Johnson
PASSPORT TO IRON CITY
Have you ever dreamed of travelling to a futuristic dystopian world? This is your ticket. Learn more.
LEARN MORE
EARLY 3D FAN EVENT
Be among the first to see Alita: Battle Angel. Get tickets now.
GET TICKETS NOW
SOUNDTRACK
Get an exclusive first listen to “The Warrior Within” from the Alita: Battle Angel Soundtrack, out February 15.
LISTEN NOW.


This is easily the best movie i have ever seen. omg was it great.
When siri got tired of being asked about the weather.
The iconic manga Battle Angel Alita tells a story about the distant future, when a teenaged cyborg is found on a giant scrap heap, and discovers who she is - and who she wants to be - through one amazing action sequence after another. It’s an astounding work of fiction, and it’s now an astounding-looking motion picture, which crams so much plot into one film that there’s practically no room for the actual point. The film, renamed Alita: Battle Angel, stars Rosa Salazar (Bird Box) as Alita, the amnesiac cyborg who views this dystopian world with wide-eyed wonder. Christoph Waltz co-stars as Ido, the kindly cyborg repairman who repairs Alita and becomes her surrogate father. Ido wants Alita to find her own destiny, free of the baggage that comes with her high-tech body. Nobody seems to know where she came from, why she’s so advanced, and why she’s an expert in a long-lost cyborg martial art. There’s enough story in Alita: Battle Angel to fill several movies. Over the course of just one film, Alita investigates a serial killer, becomes a bounty hunter, falls in love, joins a deadly professional cyborg sporting league, and uncovers the truth about her existence. Along the way she runs afoul of the sinister Vector (Mahershala Ali) and his scientist Chiren (Jennifer Connelly), who run the “Motorball” races and dabble in kidnapping, mutilation and illegal scrap. These events cover roughly the first four volumes of Battle Angel Alita, and although co-writers Laeta Kalogridis and James Cameron try to fit all those pieces together, the film has a very episodic structure. Alita rushes through one storyline, which builds to a giant climax, and then the film takes a breather while the next story ramps up to another big set piece, and then begins again. It’s almost like binging the first third of a television series and then stopping suddenly, but Alita: Battle Angel is trapped in a 122-minute running time, so everything feels rushed. The existential crisis at the center of the original story, in which Alita struggles to figure out who she is and where she comes from, gets resolved quickly, because everything has to be revealed in exposition dumps in order to get to the next amazing action sequence. So the film plays less like a powerful science-fiction story and more like a kick butt Hollywood blockbuster. But although Alita: Battle Angel falls short of its intelligent, philosophical source material, it’s still an incredible production. This is a vibrant, detailed world of cybernetic citizens and fascinating locations, simultaneously realistic and completely over the top. It’s that kind of wonderment that makes movies so magical in the first place. You are transported to another, incredible landscape full of bizarre, intriguing minutiae. Alita is a wonder to behold. And at the center of it all, Rosa Salazar gives a phenomenal performance. Though assisted by CGI limbs and artificially enhanced eyes, she imbues Alita with warmth and humanity. Her earnest humanity gets fused over the course of the film into a solid warrior’s shell, but her scenes with her would-be boyfriend Hugo (Keean Johnson) have all the tenderness of a good YA adaptation. Their story pops through the post-apocalyptic wasteland like a flower emerging from a concrete crack, and unfortunately, it’s just as likely to thrive. Alita: Battle Angel Gallery Alita’s relationship with Ido is also emotional and warm, but poor Christoph Waltz gets sidelined with half the film’s exposition, so his character doesn’t get explored very much. He’s Alita’s mentor, father, doctor, professor, and conscience, and that’s a tall order. Fortunately, Waltz plays the part beautifully, and the image of the two-time Oscar-winner wielding a gigantic rocket-powered pickaxe never stops being fun. Alita: Battle Angel is a major about-face for director Robert Rodriguez, who spent most of his career bucking the studio system in favor of low budget, imaginative independent projects. But despite his renegade attitude, he knows how to make a conventionally satisfying studio film. What’s more, his flair for eccentricity and taste for outlandish action makes Alita feel like an honest attempt to produce something exciting and new, in a climate where many other giant CGI spectacle films often seem homogenized and familiar. And although Alita: Battle Angel doesn’t reach the artistic, emotional and thematic level of the manga, it’s a noble attempt to translate Yukito Kishiro’s work into a cinematic medium. In the filmmaker’s zeal to put as much of the manga on screen as possible, they left out the quieter moments that gave all these amazing incidents a greater meaning. But everything that did make it into the movie is, at least, incredibly cool. Verdict Alita: Battle Angel is Robert Rodriguez’s best film in many years. It’s an ambitious, impressive, visually spectacular production with great performances that make its strange world seem real. It’s a shame that, by trying to adapt as much of the original manga as possible, the filmmakers left out most of the intelligent commentary that made “Alita” so powerful in the first place. This is a classic story, and it’s been turned into a film that’s merely very entertaining.


It was so good! James Cameron should postpone Avatar 2 and just make Alita 2, that would be a way better idea <3.
I finally watched the movie and this trailer definitely gave away the story.
Alita is going to fly 🧚‍♀️ with her Alitas lol.
Movie Info
Release Date: December 26, 2018
Rating: 8. 9
About Alita Battle Angel
Country: United States
Year: 2018
Category: Action, Adventure, Romance
Director: Robert Rodriguez
Starring: Jennifer Connelly, Eiza Gonzalez, Rosa Salazar
Age Restriction: 18 years
Duration: 135 minutes
Budget: $76, 0000, 00
Box Office: $
Alita Battle Angel is a 2018 Twentieth Century Fox and Lightstorm Entertainment. Alita Battle Angel is scheduled to be released on December 26, 2018.
The live-action adaptation of the Battle Angel Alita manga, Alita: Battle Angel, is due out in December and new footage of the film recently screened at CinemaCon. However, it sounds like that new footage was met with mixed response.
If you have been keeping up with Alita: Battle Angel's saga, you know it's been a long road to get to this point. James Cameron secured rights to the manga franchise several years ago but struggled to get the project off the ground. Robert Rodriguez was eventually called in to direct the movie with Cameron serving as co-producer. Rodriguez, who is perhaps best known for his work on Sin City and Machete, brought is unique, stylistic feel to the first trailer for the film -- a trailer that was met with mixed response from fans with some struggling to deal with the "anime eyes" Alita has while others had nothing but praise. The new CinemaCon footage seems to have been met with the same response, if the reactions on Twitter are any indication.
For those unfamiliar with Battle Angel Alita, the series was originally created by Yukito Kishiro. The series is set in a post-apocalyptic future and follows Alita, a cyborg who is found in a garbage heap by a doctor and rebuilt. Completely devoid of her memory, all she has to cling to is a legendary cyborg martial art known as Panzer Kunst. With this knowledge, Alita decides to become a bounty hunter. Originally published in Shueisha's Weekly Business Jump in 1990, it was collected into nine volumes and licensed for an English language release by Viz Media.
For Cameron, Alita: Battle Angel is an opportunity to dig into what it means to be human. “Battle Angel, I think, is a science fiction movie that begs the question ‘What does it mean to be human? ’ It takes place in a future world, a world that has cyborgs, but are you human if you have a mind, if you have a heart, if you have a soul? It’s a journey of a young girl who tries to discover herself and what she learns upon that journey, ” Cameron previously told SyFy Wire.
Fox has unveiled an extended fight sequence for its dystopian science-fiction actioner “Alita: Battle Angel” to the nation’s theatrical exhibitors. Footage shown Thursday at CinemaCon included the titular Alita, played by Rosa Salazar, battling a hulking half man/half machine with long metal spiked chains that extend from his hands. The clip also showed Alita finding out who she is in a future setting. “Alita: Battle Angel” opens the movie on Dec. 21.


A lot or a little?
The parents' guide to what's in this movie.
Very simple messages have to do with the class system; i. e., a lack of sharing between rich and poor causes a great, horrible divide. Though movie also has themes of female empowerment, they're wrapped up in character who's somewhat objectified for her looks.
Positive Role Models & Representations Some characters try to be good in a difficult world, and others are evil, but characters aren't fleshed out enough to be truly relatable role models. Some objectification of main character.
Lots of fantasy violence. Martial arts-style fighting. Weapons. Slicing with blades. Stabbing. Characters are killed. A dog is killed. Blood shown (cyborg blood is blue). Punching. Threats. Screaming.
Sexualized, objectified female characters. Scene of flirting/kissing between young man and female cyborg. Young man shown shirtless.
A use of "f--k, " plus infrequent uses of "s--t, " "bitch, " "piss, " "pr--k, " "hell, " "crap. "
Drinking, Drugs & Smoking Secondary characters drink whisky. Young man says he drank "too much" the night before (sort of hung over).
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User Reviews
Adult Written by Mythica February 17, 2019
Adult Written by nikkoid February 14, 2019
Teen, 15 years old Written by thisisgreat March 15, 2019
Why is it so unpopular?
Last year, I was looking at trailers for movies that were supposed to come out in 2019. Alita: Battle Angel had instantly caught my eye. The uniqueness and th... Continue reading
Teen, 14 years old Written by bookworm3284 February 17, 2019
What's the story?
In ALITA: BATTLE ANGEL, it's the 26th century, and the world has been devastated by "The Fall. " Dr. Dyson Ido ( Christoph Waltz) rummages through a scrapyard and finds a cyborg girl with an intact brain. He brings her back to his lab and gives her a new body, calling her "Alita" ( Rosa Salazar). She's instantly drawn to a boy named Hugo ( Keean Johnson), as well as to a violent sport called Motorball. Hugo secretly works for shady businessman Vector ( Mahershala Ali), helping sabotage the professional Motorball matches; Hugo hopes to earn enough money to get to the utopian sky city of Zalem. As Alita begins to learn more about her past and discovers her fighting abilities, she enters a Motorball tryout. But the evil Nova has ordered her killed. Can Alita avoid an army of attacking cyborgs while saving the day?
Is it any good?
This juggernaut-sized sci-fi movie mechanically rehashes a huge collection of genre clichés while bashing its way through an onslaught of visual effects, bad dialogue, and dull, lifeless characters. Co-written by James Cameron and directed by Robert Rodriguez, Alita: Battle Angel feels lost in a bubble; it's clueless about the real world, about real emotions, or about any other, grindingly similar movies that have come out in the real world ( Elysium, Ghost in the Shell, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, Ready Player One, Mortal Engines, etc. ). It's less like the characters are making decisions than they're being pushed through an automatic computer program. The movie has state-of-the-art visual effects, but they aren't enough to rescue Alita from seeming like a visual effect, rather than a character, all the way through.
The other characters aren't human enough themselves to reflect her supposed humanity. Perhaps worse, she's sexualized in an unsettling way, a little like the famous Maria robot in Fritz Lang's Metropolis, but creepier. Overall, Alita: Battle Angel seems to have practically nothing to say. Not even the post-apocalyptic setting appears to be warning humanity about anything in particular. Rodriguez' direction is competent, of course, and the action scenes are well-executed (except for one too many scenes of actors running through crowds and shoving extras aside), but the project isn't really much more than an empty, noisy, soulless, vaguely unpleasant special effects extravaganza.
Talk to your kids about...
Families can talk about Alita: Battle Angel 's violence. Does the fact that it's relatively bloodless and nonrealistic affect its impact? Why or why not?
Is Alita presented as a sexual being? Is she sexualized or objectified? What kind of body image is represented?
What's the appeal of the post-apocalyptic genre? What does it try to teach us? Do you think this movie is trying to teach viewers something in particular -- or warn them against something?
What does the movie have to say about social classes? Are classes meant to be different and separate? What keeps people from sharing with each other?
Do you think this movie is a good example of female empowerment? Is there a cost for the main character's power and freedom? Do you think the characters' relationships are healthy? Honest?
Themes & Topics
Our editors recommend
Visually slick but uneven action film is dark, violent.
Intense virtual reality adventure will dazzle '80s fans.
Silly but exuberant sci-fi adventure has fantasy violence.
Darkly beautiful but intense and violent anime.
Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners.
See how we rate.


I watched it on my first business class flight to Thailand. everything was so perfect, so unrealistic. i just liked the picture. 2 of my best hours in my life.
Video streams (H.264 or H.265) and audio (AC3 / OGG) are usually extracted from iTunes or Amazon Video and then reinstalled into the MKV container without sacrificing quality.
Dame ng cut.


Movie ã‚リータ バトル・エンジa à v


Movie ã‚リータ バトル・エンジà la personne.
This film is absolutely unimaginable. Alita is one of the best experiences I have ever had in my life. I haven't been this emotionally attached to the protagonist in any other movie I watched in the past. She is so badass and loveable, and her character design just adds to the tally. This movie gives you a whole new viewing experience with amazing never seen before fighting scenes and scenery. Trust me: I am the type of guy to get bored watching a movie for the second time, but with this, I can't wait to go and watch it again. I find it unbelievable that such a movie would be voted badly/average on rotten tomato's and Box Office, but I heard it's getting better and it is being released in the East and more countries worldwide. The producers are complete geniuses and the graphic designers and editors were phenomenal. If I could, I would donate millions to this movie so it could surmount its production cost as fast as possible. I think I speak for everyone when I say this: There MUST be a sequel. SEQUEL SEQUEL SEQUEL. Please, everyone do your part and rate this movie with high stars. Share with your friends, family, and even your dog because they will love it too. I spent way too much time writing this review now, but it just goes to show how unbelievable this film was. 10/10 from me 👍.


21:29 That's one scene I didn't mind the live action simply implying as opposed to showing us.
This is by far my take on witchcraft. Being an actual practicing witch and knowing this is very fantasy witchery. Just cool tbh.
BRRip is a video that has been encoded at HD resolution (usually 1080p) which is then transcribed to SD resolution.
When I saw the name alita, i for a split second thought it was from code lyoko. anyone else.
This awesome movie needed better marketing.
Storyline was much better than I expected. Maybe next sequel will be as good.
VOB can contain digital video, digital audio, subtitles, DVD menus and navigation contents multiplexed together into a stream form.


 


AN ANGEL FALLS *cuts to her falling.
Just saw it. Wow.
14:00 CAN YA SPEAK.




 






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Last updated  2020.05.30 23:26:29
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