AT A REMOTE DESERT TRUCK STOP, THE FATE OF THE WORLD WILL BE DECIDED. EVIL'S ARMIES ARE AMASSING. ARMED & UNITED BY THE ARCHANGEL MICHAEL, A GROUP OF STRANGERS BECOME UNITTING SOLDIERS ON THE FRONTLINES OF THE APOCALYP... more »SE. THEIR MISSION: TO PROTECT A WAITRESS & HER UNBORN CHILD FROM THE DEMONIC LEGION.« less
Great storyline and CGI. A must for Dennis Quaid, Paul Bettany and end of the world fans!
0 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Kevin M. Reviewed on 1/17/2014...
Four star rating. It was a great good vs evil with a good mix of action and drama.
2 of 3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Miguel C. from CICERO, IL Reviewed on 11/25/2011...
Let me being by saying that the content was offensive to my religious beliefs. Other than that, I felt that the special effects were the same over and over throughout the movie, and that it wasn't executed with much creativity. The beginning was a bit thrilling, but towards the end, I just wanted the movie to end. The plot was incredibly shallow. Definitely not worth anyone's time.
4 of 9 member(s) found this review helpful.
Jeffrey W. (JNYC) from NEW YORK, NY Reviewed on 9/25/2011...
Some awesome (surprising, you-never-saw-it-coming) monsters in this film. If you like zombie flicks, this is a good one.
2 of 4 member(s) found this review helpful.
Eric C. from SLIPPERY ROCK, PA Reviewed on 9/18/2011...
Character developement: very limited, very shallow. It appears that if a charcter gives away any kind of personal information, so you might like them at all, that is a sign that they are about to die.
Plot:
Why is this happening: Don't know, they never tell you.
What is so special about this baby?: Lame one sentence reason. Sounded like there could be hundereds for these "special children" not one.
Action:
Ok, it had its moments.
Overall:
a "c"....you don't hate it, but you will not watch it a second time.
2 of 3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Chad B. (abrnt1) from CABERY, IL Reviewed on 4/8/2011...
This film had potential, but failed to live up to it's expectations. An interesting premise that's wasted. In the end this movie is a cliche filled mess. Cookie cutter characters, bad cgi effects and a plot that's been done numerous times before (better I might add). This is a big budget film that makes low budget films look great. The concept of God declaring war on mankind is interesting, but this film wastes this to become a standard action/horror flick.
5 of 5 member(s) found this review helpful.
Deidra C. (Deidra670) from GARRETT, KY Reviewed on 10/13/2010...
Just imagine if God lost faith in us? It happened once. A long time ago.
What if it happened again? That is the premise of LEGION. I was a little leery of watching this. For some reason, this movie has inspired so much bad press. But I love a good movie with butt kicking angels, so I indulged. And I'm soooo glad I did!!
LEGION is good. It's real good. It made me feel like a kid again, watching my first really scary movie and that doesn't happen to me very often. LEGION opens with a blast and just doesn't let up, like riding a wave of action. The best way I could describe my experience of watching LEGION was it was like a big tub of buttery movie theater popcorn!! And you know you wanna eat that, even though you know it's bad for you!!
So, rather than give you a long plot summary, I'll just leave it at this--if you want good time with lots of angels packing big guns, pestilence and the scariest old lady I've ever seen, then LEGION is your film.
The angels are packing, so don't piss them off!
3 of 6 member(s) found this review helpful.
Robert G. (rural631) from SPRINGFIELD, MO Reviewed on 9/9/2010...
I was really disappointed in this, full of movie cliches. Yet another B grade diner in desert movie. Prophecy meets Evil Dead, meets a Schwarzenegger action flick.
The only thing in the film I liked was the angel Gabriel character played by Kevin Durand . Love those wings!
Gave it 2 out 5
2 of 3 member(s) found this review helpful.
Movie Reviews
A Fallen Angel Fights for Our Salvation
Chris Pandolfi | Los Angeles, CA | 01/28/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)
"God has lost faith in humanity, something that hasn't happened since the days of Noah. But instead of a flood, He has sent down a legion of angels, who possess the bodies of weak-minded people, turning them into ... certainly not demons, but then again, there's nothing angelic about these people, so maybe there's no other way to describe them. Anyway, it seems the only one who has kept the faith is the archangel Michael (Paul Bettany), who directly disobeys God by protecting what he was sent to destroy: A pregnant young waitress named Charlie (Adrianne Palicki), whose child was prophesized to be humanity's salvation. Upon finding her in a middle-of-nowhere New Mexico diner - named, appropriately, Paradise Falls - Michael leads a stranded group of strangers in an apocalyptic battle against the angels, who descend in droves.
What I find fascinating is that, for a film that comes across as nothing more than a violent, gory supernatural thriller, "Legion" tells a thoroughly absorbing story, one that, oddly enough, sends a message more hopeful and satisfying than the one sent by the duplicitous "The Book of Eli." I suspect few will latch onto this, since more time is spent on bloody shootouts and cornball dialogue; a basic shot consists of Bettany toting heavy artillery while someone over his shoulder swears loudly. Another basic shot shows a possessed person transforming hideously, and yes, this includes the overhyped scene of the old woman in the diner. And yet, in spite of all this, the subtexts are there, and there are moments of compelling character development.
Consider the relationship between Charlie and her boyfriend, a simple but decent mechanic named Jeep (Lucas Black); he wants to provide for her despite not being the father of her child, which she finds difficult to understand since she doesn't believe herself to be all that good of a person. She has no plans for the future. She contemplated an abortion, and even in her eighth month of pregnancy, she smokes. "Why do you have so much faith in me?" she asks Jeep, as if to suggest that it's wrong to care for someone who doesn't have it together. "Am I another one of your lost causes?" Jeep then leaves, refusing to indulge a woman who spends every moment feeling sorry for herself.
Another important relationship is examined. Jeep and his father, Bob (Dennis Quaid), haven't been getting along too well lately, although we quickly learn that Bob is really not a bad guy - he just doesn't want his son making the same mistakes he made, mistakes that left him without a wife in a poor desert town working a dead-end job. Although he has difficulty showing it, he sees the good in Jeep and wants him to put it to better use than fixing cars in a rusty garage.
From Michael's point of view, Jeep is a sign that, in spite of wars, injustice, bigotry, greed, and waste, humanity is indeed worth saving. But it won't be an easy fight; even if Charlie's child manages to be born, it will still be vulnerable to the archangel Gabriel (Kevin Durand), leader of the angel army on Earth. Unlike Michael, he believes that if God gives an order, it should never, ever be questioned. Needless to say, he and Michael are now enemies, although one gets the sense that, deep down, Gabriel wants to side with Michael.
I'm probably in the minority here, but I think that there are deeper aspects to "Legion." I also think that they redeem the disappointing screenplay, parts of which seem to have been written by a potty-mouthed sixteen-year-old. Some of the worst dialogue is given to Quaid, who at times portrays his character as nothing more than a country/western stereotype. And then there's Charles S. Dutton as a God-fearing veteran with a hook for a hand, who at one point recalls his father's words of wisdom about dying before waking up. It wasn't profound by any means, but the fact that he tried to make it seem like it was caught my attention.
"Legion" is not a great movie, and will never be seen as one. But I do think it's better than some have suggested. It tells a Christ-inspired fable that consistently kept me interested, and in spite of some bad dialogue, ridiculous action sequences, and overly gory special effects, it had surprisingly good depth of character. Its greatest accomplishment was its ability to tell a hopeful story without having to cheat at the last second, which is more than I can say for Denzel Washington's latest movie. Keep in mind, however, that this is coming from the guy who loved the critical flop "Knowing" and hated the much praised "Babel," so maybe my priorities aren't yet straight when it comes to spiritual parables."
Don't waste your time.
DavidStL | Missouri, USA | 05/12/2010
(1 out of 5 stars)
"If you saw the trailer .. then you saw the best this movie had to offer. Which makes me angry, because the trailer was sooooo good! Great idea but it is wasted on the slow, and dull flick, and it is a waste of good actors. The only good thing I can say is that everybody got paid. I wish I would have rented this instead of buying it! Heed my warning!"
Should have kept the 'CAMP' pedal to the metal
Marc Harris | 05/19/2010
(2 out of 5 stars)
"I don't know if the directors were shooting for cornball campiness to any degree, but there are scenes so goofy , they hint at a sort of over the top campy silliness ala Lake Placid, but not NEARLY as spectacularly brilliant as that movie was. Too bad, the weak story just does not have much gravitas. The ending is a letdown and rather boring. It moves along at awkward pace, and the trailer is more exciting than the whole flick by far. They never explained WHY a pregnant girl in the boondocks, USA is carrying the savior of humanity either LOL. Some of the special effects were cool, but that's about the extent of goodness going on in this stinker of a moive."
A plot with so many holes
Derik G. Wilson | Kansas City, MO | 05/30/2010
(2 out of 5 stars)
"This movie was watchable, but not very entertaining. Why did angels need to posses people when Micheal and Gabriel were clearly corporeal in the movie? Since when does God ever change His mind? What did the baby have to do with anything? They were all after the baby, yet Michael said that God was exterminating the human race. He said the baby was the last hope, yet the baby played really no part at all in the end-game. This movie didn't seam like a good what-if plot at all because it wasn't well thought out or even well written. With that cast, the writer and director could have made a block buster movie, but instead, the writer chose to release nonsense."