Under Siege
 

Under Siege 2 - Dark Territory [Blu-ray]

Under Siege 2 - Dark Territory [Blu-ray]

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Steven Seagal at his Finest !!!
Although I like all of Steven's movies, I like this one the best. If you like Steven Seagal,and you have not seen this movie, I'm sure you will like it, especially if you liked the first Under siege. U.S.2 Dark Territory is loaded with action, and lots of special effects. This is an 'edge of your seat' movie, be sure to have plenty of drinks and snacks by your side, before starting this movie, as there are not very many appropriate places to pause this movie, unless you like to pause in the middle of the action?! If you like Steven Seagal, then I HIGHLY recommend this one!!!
2003-01-06
cool and action pack!!!!!!!!!!!
this movie is so exciting.stevens best film yet.this movie has knives fights gun fights and fists fights.i wonder why steven always uses the same gun?i wish the bad guys wasint so stupid.i have seen all the seagal films and all of them are very good!but this one is the best if you want excitment you buy it now!!!!!!!!!!!!
2002-08-12
Chef Ryback Serves Up a Hot One!
Oh yes. Just watch Steven Seagal's face in this movie. It alone delivers an exceptional performance. Chief Casey Ryback is on route with his niece on a train to a cemetery. Wait, there's a madman on the train with a group of ex-Navy Seals. They want access codes for world domination and get rich. Well, they haven't tasted Ryback's cooking. Steven Seagal reprises his role and cooks up a storm in this one. Throw in a noisy sidekick who can't fight and Ryback is really against all odds! Many people fall out of the train while it's moving and it's a shame. Ryback gives cooking instructions how to break some bones and snappy fingers. It was delicious. This movie delivers and I was stuffed with exquisite pastry!
2002-06-07
Seagal back in action packed sequel
The man who rocked the boat in Under Siege now powers ahead like a locomotive! Steven Seagal returns as ex-Navy SEAL Casey Ryback in the explosive techno-thriller Under Siege 2:Dark Territory, directed by Geoff Murphy.
A renegade electronics whiz (Eric Bogosian) and his mercenary army have commandeered the sleek Grand Continental passenger train, transforming it into a rolling command unit for awesome weapoons satellite. Their plan is ingenious, but not flawless. Because the one passenger who eludes capture is Ryback. Suddenly the train is more than a control centre. It's a battleground. Ryback hits, runs then re-emerges in another car to fight again. All of his skills come into play. But can he work fast enough? The satellite is locked onto it's target. And the Grand Continental is barrelling towards an oncoming freight train hauling gasoline! In my opinion it is not quite as good as the first one but is just as action packed and exciting! A sequel is currently been considered.
2002-06-03
Seagal's best and one hell of an exciting ride
Since 2001 Seagal has been quite happy to let his film career crash and burn while sings the blues and does all his strange little things in his personal life (have you ever tasted his wine or his energy drink?). But there was a time in the 90s when his name guaranteed you an hour and a half of broken bones, severed limbs, bad guys in agonizing pain and a showdown with a head villain who stands no chance against the awesome hurricane force that is Steven Seagal.

I never really like the first Under Siege [Blu-ray]. I found it to be too low key and slow and after enjoying such brain-free fare as Marked for Death and Hard to Kill in my youth I had come to expect a tougher movie than the what we were given (though the tyrannical BBFC cut the film to shreds and denied me what I wanted to see). I was dismayed at the lousy 15-rating and not even Erika Eleniak's boobs could cheer me up (she's blonde-not my thing).

Flash forward to July 1995 and the awesome poster for Under Siege 2 started showing up in cinema lobbies. It featured the impassive one clinging to the side of a burning train hurtling through the countryside and featured, quite frankly, the best subtitle of any sequel ever 'Dark Territory'. This time it was rated 18 which meant I could look forward to all the blood and gore that the first Under Siege lacked. Obviously I couldn't see this film in the cinema, being only 15 and all, so I had to wait until the video came out in early 1996. By that point the BBFC (those people from the dark-ages again) had censored every last bit of red stuff to the point where it could be shown on the friggin' Disney Channel if it weren't for the swearing.

I would have to wait until 1999, when I bought the uncut US version on DVD, to see the film in it's entirety. And when I did it was like watching a brand new movie.

Casey Ryback, now the head chef of the Mile High Cafe in Denver, had retired from the Navy but still works for the government doing the odd secret mission here and there. When his brother is killed in a plane crash he takes his niece Sarah (the lurvley Katherine Hiegl) on a trip to LA on the Grand Continental, but that particular train just so happens to be hijacked by crazed computer genius Travis Dane and his band of menacing mercenaries featuring dead-eyed Everett McGill and the sleazy Peter Greene. He has a beef with the government and is only too happy to use his skills to blow the Pentagon off the face of the Earth and collect a nice paycheck from the Saudis.

Luckily for Ryback, he was momentarily absent when the hostages were rounded up as he nipped into the kitchen to bake a cake. He teams up with naive porter Bobby Zachs (Morris Chestnut, bringing life to an otherwise ordinary sidekick role) and begins his skulking, lurking mission through the shadows and voids of the train to pull the brake and free the hostages. Do these nasty people really think that they stand a chance against Ryback's awesome power and apparent invincibility? Sit back and watch them get annihilated with a variety of improvised mêlée weapons and other gruesome tools.

The train is a better setting than the boat. This time instead of a plain black backdrop we've got lots of pretty scenery and the constant forward motion of the loco gives the movie a nice momentum. Basil Poledouris' score soars miles above Gary Chang's bland notes of the first one and it honestly ends up being one of the best scores ever and a perfect example of how action music ought to be. And don't worry about this one being slow as the first. Under Siege 2 is edited so quickly that coherence is almost lost. You have to pay quick attention and perhaps watch the film a few times just to catch everything.

The comic-book nature of the plot, the cliffhanger feel of the ever-escalating mayhem and cartoonish villains might normally result in a campy movie but Under Siege 2 is as hardcore and sadistic and mean-spirited as the come. That's probably the reason the BBFC chose to cut it, claiming that it featured 'gloating and pervasive violence'. Well, I never found it to be that evil, just entertaining. Which is why I don't like narrow-minded institutions telling me what I can and cannot watch.

No one could possibly have a bad time watching this film (unless it's the UK version) and if you've had enough of Shane Meadows doing pretentious black and white stuff or Keira Knightely in a frock to last you a lifetime then the brainless and breathtaking action of Under Siege 2 is just what you need.

The Blu Ray features a 1.85:1 1080p transfer that is a vast improvement on the DVD. The sky is bluer the explosions are more colorful and the depth of the photography has a lot more clarity. Unfortunately Warner have only given us a regular Dolby Digital soundtrack, which is strange since they gave Eraser [Blu-ray], The Gauntlet [Blu-ray] and Outbreak [Blu-ray] brand new Dolby TrueHD remasters. A real shame, but the sound design of the film is lively enough to satisfy anyway. Only a bunch of trailers are included as extras.
2001-11-13
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