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The Objective

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The Objective (2008)

April. 28,2008
|
5.4
| Horror Action Thriller Science Fiction
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A team of US Special Ops forces is dispatched to a remote mountain region of Afghanistan with orders to locate an influential Muslim cleric. While on the mission they find themselves lost in a Middle Eastern 'Bermuda Triangle' of ancient evil and faced with an enemy that none of them could have imagined.

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Reviews

Hellen
2008/04/28

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Tacticalin
2008/04/29

An absolute waste of money

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Dotbankey
2008/04/30

A lot of fun.

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Tayyab Torres
2008/05/01

Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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851222
2008/05/02

Greetings from Lithuania.If you skip "The Objective" (2008) you won't lose anything. It's not bad film for one viewing if you know what you are getting into. It's not as good as "Blare Witch Project", it's not the best found footage picture out there (this one isn't even found footage film, but belongs in the same category). What i like about a movie and why i'm still recommend it, is that it has some nice acting, the scenery is believable and kinda fresh for this material. It's very nicely paced - at running time 1h 28 min i wasn't bored and watched till the end. Now the sad part about the film is the ending, which in my opinion was confusing - it doesn't answer the question what was out there (altough you can guess pretty clearly).Overall, "The Objective" isn't anything special nor original, but for one evening it will do it's justice if you know and like the premise and the genre. It's quickly forgettable, but during the ride you enjoy it as a nice little if far from best escapism.

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connda
2008/05/03

I liked the film. It's eerie and unsettling but it could have done better. The movie leaves too many open ended questions and at the end I feel like I did after watching X-files -- I want more answers.The desert is just haunting and adds much to the substance of the plot. Combined the contrasts of the desert Bedouins and their beliefs and cultures, and this movie takes on a realistic tone. You come away from the film wanted to get behind the scenes to see and comprehend that force that the soldiers are dealing with. I would actually like to see a sequel that takes that plot a little further, but unfortunately it looks as though I'm one of the few reviewer who really liked this film.

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fedor8
2008/05/04

Considering TO was made by the same putz (Myrick) who gave us "The Blair Witch Project" (which then started an crapalavalanche of awful hand-held-camera horror turds), it's miraculous that this movie is this solid. Never dull, in spite of its fairly slow pace, it offers an extremely vague ending which can be only called that – an "ending" – because it ends the movie, and not because it's any kind of viable conclusion of the story.Vague endings are a two-edged sword. On one hand, a vague ending can be thought-provoking hence interesting, something to muse over after the movie's finished. But for this to be the case, it has to be a QUALITY vague ending, not just any old run-of-the-mill vague ending, hitting the fine line between total confusion and blatant obviousness. (If you're getting sick of the word "vague", so am I. I will not use it anymore.) On the other hand, if an ending is too v****, it might be too frustrating, as it might not even hint at what the hell just went on. It is abundantly clear – especially given this director's track-record of setting up mysteries but having no clue how to end them – that if you asked Myrick to explain to you what the conclusion is really about, he wouldn't have any clue whatsoever. Hence, in a sense TO is a like a cheap magic trick. It looks good but there is nothing "deep" or "layered" behind it. It's a scam.One reviewer, who must be an incurable optimist, offers the ridiculous theory that the movie is about Djinns. The word "djinn" wasn't mentioned once, nor were lamp-derivated apparitions even hinted at, at any point in the movie, so this guy basically pulled that theory straight out of his behind. Yet he totally forgot to even mention – let alone explain – Keynes's last line, the movie's key line, "they will save us all", and how that could possibly relate to (the evil) Djinns. The Djinns will save us all? Don't they first have to ask Aladdin for permission? Perhaps Aladdin is Bin Laden; I can certainly see the similarity: Al-Laden, Bin-Laden. Myrick would be laughing, if he ever heard that theory. Besides, just picture the CIA HQ giving these orders to Keynes: "We are sending you on a top-secret mission to Afghanistan, where you will find out as much about Djinns as you can. Remember Aladdin's little friend? That's who we're looking for. And make sure to find Aladdin too. He might help us fight the Taliban, who knows what secret weapons he possesses. It would be AMAZING if we could wipe out entire armies by a simple rub of a lamp." "They will save us all". It's a neat little mega-mysterious, intriguing line to give the main character before the end-credits roll, but it means absolutely nothing. If these Djinns/aliens/leprechauns/whatever were around as far back as at the time of Alexander the Great, then why haven't they "saved us" by now? God knows a few thousand years should be more than enough for an advanced race of Djinns/aliens/leprechauns/whatevers to save anyone. And the mere notion that an advanced race of beings, good or evil, would actually decide to lounge around in the ugly, deserted, depressing rocky plains of Afghanistan for thousands of years, makes me snicker. Absurd. Wouldn't they rather settle in Florida or on the sandy beaches of Australia? "They will save us all" is sort of like Myrick's attempt to match "My God, it's full of stars", the last line uttered in Kubrick's "2001". In fact, the last few minutes of TO definitely evoke memories of that movie, and I am convinced that Myrick imitated it, whether consciously or not.Another reviewer here complains that the soldiers weren't nearly as interesting as those in "Aliens". Yes, I agree: Cameron's soldiers were action-movie buffoons, clowning around and behaving like little children half the time - hence "interesting". Myrick tried not to let this become yet another overly goofy representation of the military, tried to keep it half-way realistic, which is a good thing. Cameron can keep his silly soldiers, his stupid blue morons, and his ship-sinking lesbian love-stories (coz Di Caprio looks like a girl, see).The one thing that did annoy me greatly was Jonas Ball (Keynes) and his damn incessant mumbling. Perhaps he figured, if it worked for Brando it will work for me too. (God knows WHY it worked for Brando. More likely, Brando made it in spite of his mumbling, not because of it.) Worse yet, Myrick not only gave this chronic mumbler the main role, but narration duties too. Suffice it to say that I didn't understand whole chunks that this guy was spewing through his barely open mouth, especially during the narration, which meant I had to look at the subtitles, like some ESL schluck, in order to follow parts of the movie. His enunciation makes him come off as a tired slacker, too lazy to speak, not like a seasoned soldier working for the CIA. That isn't the voice or speaking manner of a determined, disciplined, and focused man; that's the voice of a wimp sheepishly describing why his socks are too tight.

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ajheinrich59
2008/05/05

One of the best Sci-Fi movies I've seen in a long while. And I've seen plenty. All this whining and complaining about unanswered questions, low-budget CG, unauthentic language, misses the whole point of the movie.....to entertain and to get us to think...THINK, people....about those unanswered questions and seek out the answers. As Mulder would say, "The truth is out there". It's up to us to be willing and courageous enough to seek out those answers, to follow the truth wherever it leads, accepting the truth and the conclusions they bring us to, however ugly they may be, no matter how much they may challenge our preconceived notions of who we are and what we're here for.

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