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Collateral Damage Starring:
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Cliff Curtis
Director: Andrew Davis
Rating: R
Review
Posted: 8.2.02
By
John Teves.
In one fleeting moment, Gordy
Brewer (Schwarzenegger) loses everything he ever cared about.
Against the advice of friends, the FBI, and pointed warnings
from CIA agent Brandt (Elias Koteas), Gordy sets out to track
down a ruthless terrorist called “The Wolf”(Curtis) who killed
Brewer’s family. This quest will take Brewer deep into the
inhospitable jungle terrain of war-torn Colombia. It's a plan
that has little chance of succeeding and is almost certain to
cost him his own life. But Gordy Brewer doesn't care about the
risks or the odds against him. He has nothing to loose.
Collateral
Damage is too serious to be fun. The plot feels like a straight
to video movie, yet it tries to be a regular action movie; it's
statement about the innocent victims of terrorism gets lost in
the hullabaloo. This is such a ridiculous film. There are some
scenes that will hold your attention and the ending does have a
nice surprise, but even that couldn’t save the vast portion of
this film. Fans looking for more material will have to be
satisfied with scenes in the core of the idle talk, faint
characters, predictable plot, lampoon violence, and poor acting.
>Read
Craig Younkin's Film Review!
Collateral Damage appears in an
aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on this single-sided, double-layered DVD;
the image has been enhanced for 16X9 televisions. The DVD
provided a positive picture.
Sharpness
was solid. The film was crisp and detailed. No concerns with
jagged edges and no signs of edge enhancement. Colors came
across accurately; tones appeared brilliant and customary. Black
levels looked deep and thick. Collateral Damage gives us a very
pleasing picture.
The film is
presented in a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack. The film offered an
active piece that used all five speakers. Audio quality was
excellent. Dialogue sounded natural, with no signs of edginess
or problems related to clearness; bass was deep and tight.
Ultimately, Collateral Damage offered a very ideal soundtrack
for this sort of film.
Extras:
• Commentary by
Director Andrew Davis
>It's not an
entertaining commentary -- what a waste of time. Davis is not a
commentary regular and it shows here. His comments are not very
interesting.
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• "The Hero in a New Era" (exclusive interviews of Arnold
Schwarzenegger, the Director and the Producers)
>This feature is
self-explanatory. The title says it all.
• HBO's "First Look"
>HBO does a good job
every time they profile and document a major movie. This one's
fairly well done.
• Additional/Deleted Scenes
>These few are all
branched together as one whole sequence coming after another.
These do not come with optional commentary, but the scenes speak
for themselves and why they were taken out.
The DVD is not as good as it could
have been, especially since a behind-the-scenes featurette is
missing. EXTRAS reviewed by
Stephen.
All in all, I
like Schwarzenegger pictures and find them entertaining, but
Collateral Damage is possibly the worst Schwarzenegger film to
date. The DVD provides decent picture and sound plus some choice
supplements. The film on the other hand offers little to make it
entertaining. This DVD should be skipped by all but the most
earnest Schwarzenegger fans.
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