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  4. The Battleship Full Movie In Hindi Free Download
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  40. Based on the classic Hasbro naval combat game, Battleship is the story of an international fleet of ships who come across an alien armada while on Naval war games exercise. An intense battle is fought on sea, land and air. What do the aliens want?
  41. A naval war ship encounters an alien armada and faces the biggest threat mankind has ever faced. If they lose, the world could face a major extinction event and an alien invasion. Will humans win this alien war, what are the aliens doing here, and what do they want? Based on the Hasbro naval war game.
  42. It&#39;s definitely formulaic. Campy. Ridiculous. Poorly written. Big-budget Hollywood eye-candy built for opening weekend success, and fading popularity.<br/><br/>Or is it? &quot;Battleship&quot; isn&#39;t a touching or brilliant piece, but it is surprisingly-solid entertainment.<br/><br/>The writing is deplorable. Occasionally funny, but for the most part, deplorable.<br/><br/>The actors aren&#39;t asked to do too much, but the casting went well and all the characters fit the story arc nicely.<br/><br/>The story is mind-numbingly inconsistent(see Armegeddon), but the visual effects are so well-done that it keeps the audiences attention elsewhere.<br/><br/>Think of the idea of &quot;Arrival&quot;(but not as smart), the campy goodness and strong visuals of &quot;Independence Day&quot;(with lesser actors), and a dash of NOT making fun of itself the way it should like &quot;Starship Troopers&quot;.<br/><br/>You&#39;ll watch this on cable a year or two down the road. Heck, you might even buy it from the 5 dollar bin at Walmart.(Don&#39;t do that - you&#39;ll be able to get it at a second-hand shop or pawnshop for a buck(well-spent mind you).<br/><br/>Battleship is ultimately an enjoyable film that is the definition of &quot;a popcorn movie&quot;. You should know where you stand on this going in! So don&#39;t make excuses or come running to me afterwards if you don&#39;t like it.<br/><br/>You&#39;ll like this if you liked: The Arrival(better/smarter, but much lower production values), Independence Day(even in almost every way), Miracle Mile(lower-budget ridiculousness done right), Transformers:Dark Side of the Moon(very similar, but not as &#39;decent&#39; as this), Starship Troopers(slightly better).<br/><br/>55/100 Kudo&#39;s have to go out to Peter Berg.<br/><br/>Hasbro. CGI-fest. What were the chances of me liking this? Not good. Brooklyn Decker didn&#39;t hurt, actually.<br/><br/>Hope it helps.
  43. Battleship Rating:PG-13 Runtime: 2 hours 11 minutes Staring: Alexander Skarsgard, Taylor Kitsch, Brooklyn Decker, Liam Neeson Review: 2.5/5 stars <br/><br/>I admit that I had no desire to screen what I thought was sure to be another Hollywood executives PG-13 bad idea. It&#39;s no secret that over the past few years Hollywood has seemed to run out of original ideas and have turned to rehashing, remaking, rebooting, reimaginig and generally rewarming ideas. <br/><br/>But when we&#39;re young we&#39;re taught to &quot;never judge a book by it&#39;s cover&quot; and that prejudice is wrong in any and every situation. Apparently the new film &quot;Battleship&quot; was made specifically to remind me of these lessons. <br/><br/>Still, as many fun nights as I&#39;ve had playing Monopoly at the family table,  I&#39;ve never had the thought &quot;Hey, why doesn&#39;t Hollywood spend $200 million making a live- action, CGI saturated movie based off a less fun game?&quot; <br/><br/>But, believe it or not, I&#39;m writing and you&#39;re reading a review of that very movie. Surprisingly, it&#39;s not as bad as one would expect. Especially considering Hasbro based movies have been (like Battleship game play)  &quot;hit&quot; or miss. (Transformers I and III were huge hits while Transformers II and G.I. Joe was considered by most as complete failures.) <br/><br/>The plot, like the game it was &quot;based on&quot; is simple. Taylor Kitsch (Friday Night Lights) plays Alex Hopper, a bad boy who&#39;s attempting to straighten up his act and win the approval of his girlfriend&#39;s US Navy admiral dad by following in his big brother, Stone&#39;s Alexander Skarsgard (True Blood) footsteps and joining the Navy. Luckily for Alex, he gets the chance to prove himself when aliens from an earth like planet begin an invasion.  <br/><br/>Predictably, these aliens seriously out gun us and upon arrival immediately follow the playbook of all alien invaders who have visited (and destroyed) us in theaters during past summers à la Independence Day but via Transformers-like CGI weaponry.<br/><br/>Also, as with Transformers, one of the highlights of &quot;Battleship&quot; is the humor that paces the film from one fairly predictable scene to the next. But when the story requires  intensity, emotion is manufactured by using slow motion panoramic close ups (straight out of the Micheal Bay&#39;s summer school of cinematography) to alert the audience to the gravity of the situation. Confused? Think back to any climatic scenes in the Bad Boys or Transformers franchises and picture Will Smith and Martin Lawrence or Shia LeBeouf with the sunset heroically framing their stoic looks. <br/><br/>By invoking the &quot;We&#39;re gonna go in there and kick-ass despite the odds&quot; attitude of films complimentary to the American military (literally The Right Stuff), director Peter Berg (Collateral) gets us to pick a dog in the fight. Instead of just waiting for the predictable resolution of the film, we actually cheer on the heroes moxie and feel patriotic pride while the aliens learn how serious we are about Pearl Harbor, where (not- so) coincidentally, most of the film&#39;s action takes place.<br/><br/>The cast, overall does an adequate job even when handicapped with the script&#39;s sometime hokey dialog. No one actor&#39;s performance is mentionable other than to say that Rhianna&#39;s big screen debut wasn&#39;t horrible. Liam Neeson is seriously overqualified in a role overtly reminiscent and maybe an unintentional parody of Bruce Willis&#39; character in Armageddon.<br/><br/>Battleship borrows so many elements and clichés from hit films of the past 30 years (like Top Gun, Independence Day, Alien, Transformers, Super 8, Iron Man, Armageddon and to a lesser extent Pearl Harbor) that it edges close to spoofing the respective genres. But it never crosses that line and works (please know I&#39;m using this word generously)  as it&#39;s own story because it takes so much from those other, better movies from the same (more or less)  genres. It&#39;s a Frankenstein monster of a movie which sum total is stronger than it&#39;s parts. Although rated PG-13 for violence, Battleship actually can be an entertaining family outing, (for those without young  kids.)
  44. Those looking for big, loud sci-fi action will find plenty to like here as director Peter Berg (Hancock, Friday Night Lights) pumps up the volume on clashing military hardware and flag-waving heroics.
  45. Director Peter Berg said:I spent a lot of time in the Navy thinking about who would make sense and who would bring an urban swagger to this character...put a call in, had a great couple of meetings, and she&#39;s a great girl, really hard-working, very smart, wants to be good, really strong work ethic, no attitude, no diva nonsense. She was great. There are some references in the movie that loosely connect it to the original Battleship board game. Those who are familiar with the game can pick up on them easily.<br/><br/><ul><li>Part of the plot involves the aliens emitting an electromagnetic pulse, which disrupts radio signals, including radar, communications, and targeting systems. The aliens themselves are unable to detect ships unless they have a direct line of sight. This means both sides are blind to each other&#39;s positions—just like the game, where the player is unaware of the enemy&#39;s position and can only fire blind.</li></ul><br/><br/><ul><li>The alien artillery &quot;shells&quot; look just like the pegs used in the game to mark hits and misses. In the movie, several of the enemy &quot;pegs&quot; embed themselves into a ship deck or hull, and then all simultaneously explode and sink the target ship. In the board game, an enemy ship is sunk only after several pegs are used.</li></ul><br/><br/><ul><li>Due to their lack of radar, the Navy resorts to receiving signals from the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) system of buoys. The system is designed to track tsunamis (and other natural events) by detecting water displacement levels, but can detect any massive water displacement, such as those caused by the alien ships. The NOAA system is composed of a network of buoys spread across the ocean surface to form a grid, which is displayed on the Navy ship&#39;s instruments, and looks similar to the grids used by players in the game. Also (as in the game) the Naval personnel call out alien targets using a letter-number code to mark positions on the grid—and spotters on the ship call out &quot;miss&quot; and &quot;hit&quot; after each missile salvo.</li></ul> No, but someone does say, &quot;They&#39;re not sinking this battleship!&quot; It&#39;s the Naval Working Uniform (NWU). Based on the MARPAT Marine Corps Combat Utility Uniform, with multiple pockets on the shirt and trousers, it uses a multicolor digital print pattern similar to those introduced by other services. However, the NWU is also made in three variants: predominantly blue (with some gray) for the majority of sailors and shipboard use; a woodland digital pattern; and a desert digital pattern for sailors serving in units requiring those types of uniforms, such as SEALs. Woodland and desert variants may be tailored differently than the blue-pattern uniform. The overall blue color reflects the Navy&#39;s heritage and connection to seaborne operations. The pixelated pattern is also used to hide wear and stains, something unavoidable with the utilities and working khakis used previously. The colors were also chosen to match the most commonly used paint colors aboard ship, extending the lifetime of the uniform on long deployments where uniforms often come into contact with freshly painted surfaces. This uniform is also worn at Naval Medical Center San Diego and other on-shore facilities. As of 2012 the NWU is authorized for wear outside of military installations. Yes. There&#39;s a short scene showing three Scottish kids finding one of the derelict pieces that splintered from the original formation at the beginning of the film. A man with a truck full of tools happens by and uses some of his implements to try to open it, failing, until a blowtorch works. They struggle and finally succeed in opening the pod, and the scene ends with them all running off scared, when an alien inside starts climbing out. &quot;Interstate Love Song&quot; by Stone Temple Pilots. a5c7b9f00b
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