Friday 1 February 2019

'Alita: Battle Angel' falters where it matters most but makes up for it with bright action scenes and a talented cast

Cyborg fight scene Alita Battle Angel 20th Century Fox20th Century Fox

  • Warning: Minor spoilers ahead for "Alita: Battle Angel."
  • New sci-fi action movie "Alita: Battle Angel" is an impressive achievement in visual effects that skates by on thin writing thanks to a fantastic ensemble cast. 

"Alita: Battle Angel" starts with a compelling opening. From the moment the familiar 20th Century Fox logo flickers and changes to say "26th Century Fox" in decrepit lettering instead, there's a promise of greatness ahead. But about halfway through the spectacle of impressive world-building and character designs, the story's weakness begin overtaking the impressive cast and well-designed action. 

Why you should care: The movie is based on a successful manga series and has a fantastic cast 

"Alita: Battle Angel" is an adaptation of a'90s Japanese manga series called Gunnm by Yukito Kishiro. This live-action version was produced and co-written by James Cameron ("Titantic," "Avatar") along with Laeta Kalogridis (Netflix's "Altered Carbon"). It was directed by Robert Rodriguez ("From Dusk Till Dawn," "Spy Kids").

See the rest of the story at Business Insider

NOW WATCH: Saturn is officially losing its rings — and they're disappearing much faster than scientists had anticipated

See Also:



from Feedburner https://read.bi/2Ge0sri

No comments:

Post a Comment

Tim Tully taught himself to code at age 6 and still codes daily. Here's how computer science took him from startups to AI investing at Menlo Ventures.

Tim Tully is a partner at Menlo Ventures. Menlo Ventures Tim Tully taught himself to code when he was six and went to school for comput...