Atlas Shrugged: Part II

October. 12,2012      PG-13
Rating:
5.3
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Trailer Synopsis Cast

The global economy is on the brink of collapse. Brilliant creators, from artists to industrialists, continue to mysteriously disappear. Unemployment has risen to 24%. Gas is now $42 per gallon. Dagny Taggart, Vice President in Charge of Operations for Taggart Transcontinental, has discovered what may very well be the answer to the mounting energy crisis - found abandoned amongst ruins, a miraculous motor that could seemingly power the World. But, the motor is dead... there is no one left to decipher its secret... and, someone is watching. It’s a race against the clock to find the inventor and stop the destroyer before the motor of the World is stopped for good. A motor that would power the World. A World whose motor would be stopped. Who is John Galt?

Samantha Mathis as  Dagny Taggart
Jason Beghe as  Henry Rearden
Esai Morales as  Francisco d'Anconia
Patrick Fabian as  James Taggart
Kim Rhodes as  Lillian Rearden
Richard T. Jones as  Eddie Willers
D.B. Sweeney as  John Galt
Paul McCrane as  Wesley Mouch
John Rubinstein as  Dr. Floyd Ferris
Robert Picardo as  Dr. Robert Stadler

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Reviews

Lovesusti
2012/10/12

The Worst Film Ever

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NekoHomey
2012/10/13

Purely Joyful Movie!

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Smartorhypo
2012/10/14

Highly Overrated But Still Good

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Aiden Melton
2012/10/15

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Michael Ledo
2012/10/16

The film suffers from attempting to make a modern adaptation of Ayn Rand's master piece. Part 2 does better than Part 1 as we now see the cell phones and computers in abundance. However, alternative energy seems nonexistent. Indeed with gas at $40.00 a gallon, Volts and Prius would be everywhere. Since plastic comes from petroleum, the use of plastic as a coffee cup lid would have ceased. But the film was made to show us that when all the world's best and brightest are taken away, Sean Hannity would be left behind and no one can fill the void of those wonderful job creators.No matter which side of the political spectrum you are on the film agrees with both: The poor couldn't exist without the rich. Henry Rearden (Jason Beghe) is quite the despicable character to be the hero of libertarian capitalism. He makes amateur speeches similar to those made by tax protesters I knew in the 1980s...the ones who ended up in jail. His message is simple: Government is evil. Taxes are robbery. Tax money given to help everyone but himself, goes to looters. In this film capitalism has gotten so out of control, they force the hand of government to nationalize all business and created a sudden communistic society by executive order. Can't happen, but try to go with it.There is a gross exaggeration of the battle between capitalism and socialism, as if the two can not coexist in one society, except it does exist that way in every society to one degree or another. However, they don't exist exclusively without each other. You hear the mantra of the barter system "True value for value." Hand me my barf bag.The main problem I had with the film was not the exaggerated if not cartoonish view it took on economics, but the stiff cardboard characters who can't act. The directing, editing, and screen adaptation also left much to be desired. And yet, as bad as it was, it was an improvement over the first film.

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amkingery
2012/10/17

I just got around to watching the first two parts of Atlas Shrugged in preparation for the upcoming release of Part III.Looking past all philosophical objectives, this book changed my life. I have never been so connected to a group of characters or a story line in my life as I was when reading it. I don't consider myself an advocate of objectivism, but the way Rand depicts the triumph of the human spirit has always proved to be uplifting for me personally, and I love all of her novels.That being said, I was terribly disappointed in these movies. I feel like the casts did what they could, and that the general idea was portrayed decently, but there is a depth and beauty in the novel that was totally lost in translation to film. The film is left dry and without any real feeling to it. Instead of feeling connected to the story and uplifted by the successes of characters I love, I was bored and disheartened by the total obliteration of one of my favorite books.I also hate how much they give away about the disappearances throughout the movies, when reading the novel you are left in a lot more suspense as to what is happening. So, basically, these movies are a lot like the book if you strip everything away from the book that makes it wonderful.

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david-5098
2012/10/18

I haven't read the book, but if this is supposed to win people over to Ayn Rand's viewpoint, it is miserable. We don't get "grade B" movies any more now that double features went away. But that's what this is. Cheesy special effects. Minimum wage actors. Bad screen writing. The actors can't improve on the horrible script. I can't believe anyone likes this movie. I think anyone who has given this a positive review must be trying to pump up the rating because Ayn Rand is supposed to be some kind of visionary? I'm not sure.I can't think of another recent movie that I have laughed out loud at because of how awful it is. This has got to be one of the worst movies I have ever seen.

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geraldconques
2012/10/19

The first movie was a pile of garbage, this movie is a pile of garbage with vomit on top. Where do I start. The special effects were crude and looked home made, like on a laptop on the kitchen table bad. The acting was so mechanical and bad, Arnold Schwarzenegger thinks its funny, but he won't be coming back. And the script, who wrote it, Linda, Heather R., Heather B., Heather L., Heather A., Blair, Ashley Binder-Joiner-Pinker-Kelssey-Pugner-Koch and Cindy Bowen. It reads like a bunch of prep school girls wrote it while they were mad at their teacher and were stuck at the Mall because their dad's limo couldn't come pick them up for two hours and there was no cell phone service (the horror) at the Mall. This "movie" failed on every front, why, because it deserved to. This move is a narcissistic ego trip trying to pass itself off as a thinly veiled attempted by the morally corrupt elite "right" to portray itself as the "victim" of the all consuming poor. This movie is completely disconnected from reality, it is fiction, no worse, its bad fiction, even worse, its preachy bad fiction. If I could find out where to write to demand my money back, I am willing to spend hours to do it, just so I could know that NONE of my money went to the support the "groups" that made this huge pile of puke. Trash.

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