Battle: Los Angeles

Battle: Los Angeles

It's not war. It's survival.

Sinopse

When once distant UFOs become a terrifying threat and an alien invasion force begins attacking Earths major costal and riverside cities, a U.S Marine staff sergeant and his team are sent into battle only to find they must take it upon themselves to defeat an unknown enemy and protect what remains of Los Angeles.

  • 5.8
  • 2011
  • Released
  • 1h 56m
Status

Released

Original Language

en

Budget

$70,000,000.00

Revenue

$211,800,000.00

Keywords
  • #hero
  • #saving the world
  • #chaos
  • #marine corps
  • #retirement
  • #meteor
  • #space invasion
  • #alien
  • #survival
  • #battlefield
  • #sergeant
  • #los angeles, california
  • #battle
  • #alien invasion
  • #u.s. marine
  • #escapade
  • #heroic mission
  • #evil alien

Reviews

M
@Malia101over 1 year ago

Brilliant and full of action!

J
@Jsalterover 1 year ago

It’s criminal how underrated Battle LA really is.

J
@jassa2244over 1 year ago

Most underrated film ever.

mooney240
@mooney240almost 3 years ago

**Battle: Los Angeles is a grounded and well-done invasion movie that tells its story with a realism unique to the genre.** Battle: Los Angeles is excellent! I am baffled by the low Rotten Tomatoes score and bad reviews. Battle: Los Angeles tells a gritty and realistic story of what it might actually look like if otherworldly extraterrestrials invaded. There aren’t any larger-than-life characte

S
@SierraKiloBravoover 5 years ago

Click here for a video version of this review: https://youtu.be/kdUtKcM4rJA _Battle: Los Angeles_ is a 2011 film that Wikipedia describes as a “military science fiction apocalyptic action film”. That’s a lot of genres mashed into one movie, but boy do they pull it off. So what’s this all about then? Here’s the official description: _The Earth is attacked by unknown forces. As people everywhe

W
@wilburKlickalmost 8 years ago

When it comes to violent film - I'm divided. I don't go out of my way to watch movies about actual, historical battles, because I know that real people died (or were physically or mentally crippled); sons and daughters, sisters and brothers, mothers and fathers . . . even children. The prospect of of reliving those tragic (even if heroic) deaths is too painful for me. And yet, give me an

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