Version 2. International Version. Version 1. Clip Featurette Photos Top cast Edit. Tom Cruise Jack as Jack. Morgan Freeman Beech as Beech. Andrea Riseborough Victoria as Victoria. Olga Kurylenko Julia as Julia.
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau Sykes as Sykes. Melissa Leo Sally as Sally. John L. Fileena Bahris Survivor as Survivor uncredited. Joanne Bahris Tourist as Tourist uncredited. Andrew Breland Survivor as Survivor uncredited. Dieterich Survivor as Survivor uncredited. Paul Gunawan Survivor as Survivor uncredited. Julie Hardin Librarian as Librarian uncredited. Joseph Kosinski. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. One of the few remaining drone repairmen assigned to Earth, its surface devastated after decades of war with the alien Scavs, discovers a crashed spacecraft with contents that bring into question everything he believed about the war, and may even put the fate of mankind in his hands.
Earth is a memory worth fighting for. Did you know Edit. Trivia A full-sized bubble ship was created with doors that opened on their own, and Tom Cruise , a licensed pilot, provided input for the design of the controls. Goofs Vika's desk display shows Jack tapping out the word "Paradise" in Morse code to communicate with her, but the actual Morse code letters we hear are "a-d-i-s-t-r-a-e-e".
Quotes Jack Harper : If we have souls, they are made of the love we share Crazy credits The Tet can be seen in the opening Universal logo, orbiting the Earth. Connections Featured in Projector: Oblivion User reviews 1K Review.
Top review. Visually excellent though slightly too long. This movie is - without a doubt - one of the most visually spectacular that I have ever seen, standing shoulder-to-shoulder in that department with the likes of Watchmen, Prometheus, Sunshine and Kosinski's preceding effort - TRON: Legacy.
Also like TRON the soundtrack is excellent and very well used throughout, enhancing the action and adding depth to some - at times - distinctly average acting performances. One day, Harper spots an antique spacecraft crashing into the countryside. He manages to rescue one survivor, a Russian astronaut Olga Kurylenko who looks exactly like the woman in his dreams.
Harper brings her back to his tower. This incites jealousy and suspicion from Vica, who is both Harper's partner and his lover. The astronaut has been in cryogenic sleep for the past six decades but refuses to disclose the nature of her mission to Harper and Vica until they recover her flight recorder. It goes without saying that the flight recorder unearths all kinds of secrets about Harper, Vica, and the alien invasion.
It also creates one of the movie's more glaring logical errors, but that's a different story altogether. The film's opening stretch is its one strong point — a gradual, immersive build-up of details. It's a smart technique for science-fiction storytelling; it eases the viewer into the world of the film. The problem is that the world "Oblivion" introduces — an abandoned, depopulated Earth — is more interesting than the story it tells. Or, more accurately, the stories it tells, because "Oblivion," derivative to a fault, tries to be several science-fiction movies at once.
It tries and it fails. It's a wannabe mindbender that raises questions about its lead character's identity — except that the lead character is too sketchy to make these questions compelling. It's a story about humans struggling for survival in an environment controlled by technology — except it appears to be much more interested in the technology than in the humans.
It's a rah-rah action flick — except its action scenes aren't very good. The only thread "Oblivion" follows to the end is its "creation myth. Though most of the movie's characters are women, not one of them is able to do anything without Harper's help — not even the mother triangle that lives in the space uterus. Only his rugged-but-sensitive masculinity holds the key to humanity's survival. The movie reaches for profundity, but all it grasps is misogyny.
Tom Cruise as Jack. Morgan Freeman as Beech. Olga Kurylenko as Julia. Andrea Riseborough as Victoria. Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as Sykes. Melissa Leo as Sally. Reviews Oblivion. Ignatiy Vishnevetsky April 18, Now streaming on:.
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