Search - Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines (2-Disc Full Screen Edition) on DVD


Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines (2-Disc Full Screen Edition)
Terminator 3 - Rise of the Machines
2-Disc Full Screen Edition
Actors: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, Kristanna Loken, Claire Danes, David Andrews
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Genres: Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Mystery & Suspense
R     2004     1hr 49min

With a reported budget of $172 million, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines starts in high gear and never slows down. The apocalyptic "Judgment Day" of T2 was never prevented, only postponed: John Connor (Nick Stahl, replac...  more »
     
     

Larger Image

Movie Details


Similar Movies

The Terminator
UMD for PSP
   R   2005   1hr 48min
Terminator Salvation
Director's Cut
Director: McG
   R   2009   1hr 57min
   
Total Recall
Blu-ray
   R   2006   1hr 53min
   
The Day After Tomorrow
UMD for PSP
   PG-13   2006   2hr 4min
Mr Mrs Smith
Blu-ray
Director: Doug Liman
   PG-13   2007   2hr 0min
   
Terminator 2 Judgment Day
Skynet Edition
Director: James Cameron
   R   2009   2hr 32min
   
Predator
Full Screen Collector's Edition
Director: John McTiernan
   R   2004   1hr 47min
   
The Dark Knight
Two-Disc Special Edition
   PG-13   2008   2hr 32min
   
Collateral Damage
Blu-ray
Director: Andrew Davis
   R   2009   1hr 48min

Similarly Requested DVDs

The Terminator
Director: James Cameron
   R   2001   1hr 48min
   
Terminator 2 - Judgment Day
Extreme DVD
Director: James Cameron
   R   2003   2hr 17min
   
Pirates of the Caribbean - The Curse of the Black Pearl
Two-Disc Collector's Edition
Director: Gore Verbinski
   PG-13   2003   2hr 23min
   
Sleepy Hollow
Director: Tim Burton
   R   2000   1hr 45min
   
Terminator 2 - Judgment Day
The Ultimate Edition DVD
Director: James Cameron
   R   2000   2hr 17min
   
Blade
Director: Stephen Norrington
   R   2hr 0min
   
The Matrix
   R   1999   2hr 16min
   
Blade Runner
The Director's Cut
Director: Ridley Scott
   R   1997   1hr 57min
   
Godzilla
Director: Roland Emmerich
   PG-13   1998   2hr 19min
   
Pirates of the Caribbean - Dead Man's Chest
Widescreen Edition
Director: Gore Verbinski
   PG-13   2006   2hr 31min
   
 

Movie Reviews

Macho Man
Van Halen Kurtz | Twin Oaks | 08/06/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"There's something unkillable about the idea of Terminator. Usually we (humans) get punished in the future for misdeeds we commit in the past or present. Take Star Trek IV, for one example out of millions. The Terminator idea, however, has it: we (humans) get punished in the past or present for misdeeds we commit in the future. That's a big Does Not Compute for ya there, captain. And so it goes compellingly into the future. No fate but what we make was the central code of Terminator 2 but Terminator 3 knows better. It's a sequel to a sequel and even the past has progressed along. Jonathan Mostow gives us the same movie which is what we demand but only bigger and badder and louder which is also what we demand. Expectations thwarted, cleverly ~ but only momentarily. There's less sentimentalism, less character development, less existential commotion and that's great. We all know machines are here to stay. Action. It's almost a silent film. Except for the sound of things exploding. The car chase sequence remains one of the most exciting ever filmed. Violence and strong language, that's why we're here. Fortunately there's no overreaching attempt to conjure up a catchy catchphrase ("Hasta la vista baby"). Schwarzenegger is gruffer than before, has less to say and is classy about it. "I'm an obsolete design." Kristanna Loken has Robert Patrick's act down clone cold. Little did anyone ever suspect in 1984, women's lib would have progressed so far that Arnold Schwarzenegger could plonk a urinal down hard across a babe's head and we'd all still be worried for his safety? Take a hint this isn't a battle of the sexes as much as showdown between Lexus-driving Xers and cowboy truck-driving boomers. Like Schwarzenegger's recalcitrant generation, Terminator 3 faces its dread of mortality and its fear of machines merely fleetingly before deciding either men or machines, it doesn't matter anymore, all we know is that heroes remain unkillable in either past, present or future."