2012 Movie Download Hd

2012 Movie Download Hd

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2012 Movie Download Hd

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Geophysicist Adrian Helmsley officially visits India's Dr. Satnam Tsurutani, his pretty wife, Aparna, and their son. From thence, he is led to the world's deepest copper mine, where he finds evidence that the Earth's crust is heating up faster than expected. He quickly collects evidence, and presents it before the President of the United States. Expecting the news to hit leading media, he is instead stunned when he learns that the powers-that-be have no intention of publicizing this catastrophe, and are intent on saving wealthy families that can shell out a billion Euros per family on four mammoth arks - without realizing that if the Earth is indeed headed for the prophetic self-destruction on 21 December 2012 - how can arks and it's wealthy inhabitants survive?
Only a few years after the American geologist Adrian Helmsley's warnings of an impending global Armageddon by the year 2012, the Earth is devastated from end to end by cataclysmic natural disasters. As the President of the U.S. along with other leaders of the G8 Nations complete their secret project in Tibet to build colossal arks to sustain humanity, at the same time, the struggling Los Angeles author, Jackson Curtis, goes through hell and back to reunite with his ex-wife and their two kids. Inevitably, the unfathomable catastrophes are rapidly escalating, while Jackson strives to give his family a future in Tibet, however, can he make it in time?
I went to see this movie in theatres thinking that it should be alright… boy was I wrong!! The whole film was just CGI! Here's something else to think about… if the movie was about how The world was going to end, than why did so many people survive in the end?? It was the stupidest film I've ever scene!!! Also, it wasn't really a drama film as they called it… it was more of a COMEDY film!! Look at the "goofs" section of this film on IMDb… so many!! Those are just some of the things that I thought were unbelievably stupid, wrong or just anything else that sucked about this cruddy little "film" I you can even call it that!
I didn&#39;t remember what I had heard about this movie, but I knew from the TV listings that this was a movie about the Mayan prediction that the world would end December 21, 2012. There is the obligatory expert trying to convince those that can do something that this is a big deal. And the something they can do is prepare. This cannot be stopped. But as in the case of &quot;The Day After Tomorrow&quot;, once it starts and cannot be stopped, it&#39;s happening too fast for anyone but a select few to survive.<br/><br/>And only wackos will believe it&#39;s happening. One in particular is a major focus of this movie. He is the standout performer by far, and not once before I saw the closing credits did I imagine this would be Woody Harrelson. He has too much hair to be recognizable, but still--this guy is good! With some sort of low-budget connection with the world to get his message out, he has a few followers. And he takes risks. When will he ever get another chance to see such calamity? <br/><br/>Danny Glover as the President gives a dignified and authoritative performance that made me think of Sidney Poitier. I knew he wasn&#39;t old enough and didn&#39;t look quite like the man.<br/><br/>Another standout performer is the quiet Tibetan holy man.<br/><br/>And of course the visual effects are nothing less than fantastic, if you had the ability to advance one frame at a time, which I didn&#39;t. It all happened too fast. And miraculously, almost every disaster happens in such a way that a main character or characters escaped JUST IN TIME! Yes, I said every disaster. This is not one disaster. This is many disasters, all over the world, happening in just a matter of days. Pick almost any world landmark (okay, that&#39;s an exaggeration--they picked about a dozen or so) and you can watch it crumble.<br/><br/>And then of course there are the people. Not a lot of quality performances, but a bad Lifetime movie where it just happens the world is ending. That&#39;s fine for me. I like having this dysfunctional family as a focus. A scared 7-year-old girl who is actually quite resilient. Her slightly older brother who resents that his father is no longer around, even though circumstances have sort of reunited the family. A pretty mom with an attitude. And a rich doctor whose contributions will prove invaluable. And let&#39;s not forget Dad, the hero of the whole picture--who knows how many lives he saves?<br/><br/>You have to look at this film with a sense of humor. For example, the couple in the supermarket is growing apart. And then, the floor cracks open and separates them--literally--and swallows the food on the shelves. Way too fast for me.<br/><br/>Let&#39;s not forget the obligatory speech toward the end by our other hero--the man who tried to warn everyone in positions of authority (as opposed to ordinary people, who the Glenn Beck of Yellowstone wanted to reach) but was pretty much ignored. Toward the end, he has to quickly change attitudes before the end of the world becomes something much worse (Worse? Really? Yes.). It&#39;s a corny but great moment.<br/><br/>This just keeps growing and growing. Just when you think it can&#39;t get any more complicated, it does. The end is very exciting, with deadlines that can&#39;t be moved, actions that have to be taken fast, with possible deadly consequences for those who do (but thousands more will die otherwise), arguments between world leaders, ethical dilemmas--you can&#39;t say it&#39;s not a thrill ride. Whether it&#39;s actually good--who cares? It&#39;s kind of scary watching everything blowing up, disappearing, thousands of unseen people surely dying, but you knew that coming in, right? <br/><br/>Just go with it.
For visual noise by the ton, Emmerich is my kind of hack, the pluperfect blend of leaden self-seriousness and accidental-on-purpose self-satirist.
December 21st, 2012 marks the ending of the 13th b&#39;ak&#39;tun cycle of the Mayan Long Count Calendar, and it&#39;s also the last cycle of the Long Count. The Mayan Calendar ends December 21st, 2012. The 2012 Doomsday belief suggests that the Mayans foretold the end of the world at this time and, since the world is ending, there&#39;s no need to continue counting days or making calendars past that point. While that date would have had significance to the Mayans, there&#39;s no proof they actually believed the world would cease to exist. The ending of one calendar would start a new calendar, similar to how the current year ends on December 31st, but a new year is made at the same time. Some news articles published in the months leading up to December 21st, 2010, finally called into question the validity of the Mayan Calendar, stating that the end date of the calendar is recalculated to bypass December 2012 or that it had already passed. Director Roland Emmerich is known for his disaster films full of moments of comic relief. 2012 has a bit of comedy in it, but the majority of the movie is serious and sometimes quite emotional and dramatic. The scientists in the film state that the end of the world has started earlier than predicted; most likely during the summer period of 2012 and not winter, as newscaster dialog announces that the XXX Olympic Summer Games (to be held in London from the 27th July to the 12th August, 2012) have been suspended in the movie. Since the movie is about the end of the world, the majority of the world&#39;s population die, but many of the main characters survive. It has been mentioned that 100,000 people would be on each ark, plus some 10,000 Chinese workers. There are three of these ships in total, meaning that around 310,000 people survived. No. It&#39;s impersonator <a href="/name/nm3636991/">Lyndall Grant</a> playing the part of Governor Schwarzenegger and reading his dialog for comic effect. President Thomas Wilson (<a href="/name/nm0000418/">Danny Glover</a>) decides to stay behind while his staff boards Air Force One to escape the upcoming natural disasters. When a large earthquake strikes the nation&#39;s capital, the President, along with many others, is helping wounded citizens on the front lawn of the White House &amp; everyone is knocked to the ground. After the President picks himself up, he sees a large tsunami carrying a aircraft carrier hurdling towards him. The scene ends as the wave and the carrier (ironically named the USS John F Kennedy CV-67) crash into the White House. Not really but Jackson (<a href="/name/nm0000131/">John Cusack</a>) is probably meant to, in a minor way, symbolize Christ. Jackson&#39;s initials are J.C., and there are biblical references, such as his son being called Noah, and the arks are to help during the flood. He also leads a group of people away from danger to safety, which is a slight parallel to Jesus leading his followers to a new faith in God, etc. 2012 is based on a spec script (speculative script) co-written by director Roland Emmerich &amp; co-producer Harald Kloser, indicating in the the end credits that the film was &quot;inspired in part&quot; by the book Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock. The film borrows several themes and elements from Jules Verne&#39;s rarely known novelette &quot;The Eternal Adam&quot;, which shows a distant future archaeologist called Sofr-Ai-Sr, who belongs to a completely different civilization from ours called Hars-Iten-Schu, and someday finds a manuscript inside an aluminum box, narrating how in May 24th, 2XXX, a limousine driver called Modesto Simonet, his scientific boss (who wrote the manuscript), other scientifics on a vacation, and several other notable men and their families in Rosario, Mexico, survived a sudden flooding from the Atlantic Ocean by the heroic act of Simonet, who drove a car as fast as he could towards the mountains. In a matter of hours, the whole American Continent sinks in the ocean, except for the small island that used to be a mountain. They are rescued by a cargo ship, and they wander in a futile search for land anywhere else, only to discover that the tiny island was growing every time they passed by. The manuscript author ponders on the fate of Atlantis, and points a parallel with his situation. This old document leads Sofr to think that his civilization is descendant from those survivors after a period of mass involution of the human race, and that they survived thanks to a whole new continent that raised from the bottom of what used to be the Pacific Ocean for the survivors, and for Sofr is the only existing continent. Also, Sofr theorizes that is imminent that another global flooding happens someday. While the movie is far from an adapted work, a small credit would have been used instead of that of Graham Hancock, given the obvious allusions, but the reason why it wasn&#39;t the case is not known by the public. The world was either not given enough time to finish them or there wasn&#39;t enough money to build them without drawing attention and causing panic. Also, the Captain of the main cruiser tells Anheuser that one of the other ships developed a technical malfunction and possibly can&#39;t be used during the evacuation. a5c7b9f00b

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