Home SP Blog SP Forum Join Now Login

Switch Categories

SwitchPlanet

Switchbuc Calculator

FAQs

Doom (Unrated Widescreen Edition)

Availability

Switchbucs Switcher Switches Switcher Rating  
11 Al Volker
Disc, Artwork, Case
120 70 [ Buy It ]
These members have it but are not switching it at this time FerneyMackGamesRock8INEYEGEEGEEAYEMrSqueezlesPimpAdrianXavier Valdruidallenrb2baynarddancecrazedchikeparrbakerjavitejanoricketts_15shasha1002shivmaster77squirtanenzml66

Theatrical Release

October 21, 2005

DVD Release

October 21, 2005

Studio

Universal Studios

Rated

R (Restricted)

Directors

Andrzej Bartkowiak

Actors

Karl Urban, The Rock, Rosamund Pike, Dexter Fletcher, Ben Daniels, Al Weaver, Richard Brake, Yao Chin, Razaaq Adoti, Deobia Oparei, Brian Steele, Robert Russell (VIII), Daniel York, Ian Hughes (VI), Sara Houghton, Blanka Jarosova, Vladislav Dyntera, Petr Hnetkovsky, Jaroslav Psenicka, Marek Motlicek

Switchers Rate This:

Currently selling for $1.99 NEW at Amazon.com

Formats

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC

Additional Information

Grab your BFG and get ready to kick some Martian-demon butt in Doom, another entry in the increasingly crowded videogame-to-movie genre. The Rock plays Sarge, the commander of a squad of Marines sent to investigate a disturbance at a scientific research facility on Mars. Among the squad is John Grimm (Karl Urban, who played Eomer in The Lord of the Rings), who turns out to have had a previous relationship with Samantha (Rosamund Pike, Die Another Day), the scientist who's accompanying the Marines in order to retrieve some vital data from the facility. Based on id Software's legendary first-person shooter, Doom tries its best to look like a game, with dark, angled corridors, ferocious creatures appearing out of nowhere, and a variety of lethal weapons that will, like the aforementioned BFG, warm the cockles of a gamer's heart. There's also one memorable sequence that actually turns the movie into a first-person shooter; the good news is that in the context of the whole film, it's not quite as goofy as it might have been. And that's not a bad frame of reference for the film in general. Considering the game-to-movie field includes such duds as Wing Commander, if you go into Doom with low expectations, you'll probably find it a surprisingly respectable horror/sci-fi thriller in the Resident Evil vein (including its somewhat obligatory subplot of corporate wrongdoing). Also in its favor is that it's unabashedly R-rated, for the extreme gore that is a trademark of the game. After all, the purpose of the movie is to pack scares and thrills into a setting that gamers will quickly recognize. In that sense, it qualifies as a success. --David Horiuchi - Amazon.com

_