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| Original Title |
End of Days |
| Director |
Peter Hyams |
| Genre |
Horror, Action, Thriller, Mystery |
| Released |
1999-11-16 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated R for intense violence and gore, a strong sex scene and language. |
| Rated |
5.3 |
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| In 1979, an innocent newborn girl is secretly patronized by Satanists. Twenty years later, she has developed into a young woman, who is haunted by dreams about one strange man. Menawhile, private security guard Jericho takes down an old and homeless priest, who tried to shoot Jericho's customer, a successful Wall Street Banker. What Jericho does not know is that Satan himself roams the Streets of New York in order to mate with the chosen girl. If he manages to do so in the last hour before the next millenium, his only chance to get out of his eternal prison is gone and he has to wait another thousand years. Now it is up to atheist Jericho to find the girl before Satan does and protect her from harm. But Jericho does not have a clue who he's up against... |
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| Arnold Schwarzenegger as Jericho Cane , Gabriel Byrne as The Man/Satan , Robin Tunney as Christine York , Kevin Pollak as Chicago , CCH Pounder as Detective Margie Francis , Derrick O'Connor as Thomas Aquinas , David Weisenberg as OB/GYN , Rainer Judd as Christine's Mother , Miriam Margolyes as Mabel , Udo Kier as Head Priest , Victor Varnado as Albino , Michael O'Hagan as Cardinal , Mark Margolis as Pope , Jack Shearer as Kellogg , Rod Steiger as Father Kovak |
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End of Arnold's Daze
This picture was made as another try by Arnie to convince us that he is a
smart guy. He's been going down the list with attempts, comedy, drama... In
the Last Action Hero, he tried something -- self-reference -- that was
intellectually ambitious, and clearly beyond his reach.
Here he tries religion, but hedges his bet by wrapping it in action. He
hires a very artsy director, and a couple accomplished actors, perhaps
thinking they will lift his boat. But no chance. This film is dumb, and so
is Arnie, and the stuff that is done well just amplifies that
fact.
The DVD commentary is a hoot, with every third comment being a compliment on
Arnie's intelligence, his acting skills, his commitment as an
artist.
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