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Arnold Schwarzenegger
Arnold Alois
Schwarzenegger was born July 30, 1947. Arnold is an
Austrian-American bodybuilder, actor, businessman and
politician, currently serving as the 38th Governor of the state
of California.
Arnold gained worldwide fame as a Hollywood action film icon.
Schwarzenegger was nicknamed "The Austrian Oak" and "The Styrian
Oak" in his bodybuilding days, "Arnold Strong" and "Arnie"
during his acting career, and more recently "The Governator" (a
portmanteau of Governor and Terminator, referring to his
internationally popular film role).
Arnold Schwarzenegger is married to Maria Shriver and has four
children. As a Republican, Arnold was first elected on
October 7, 2003, in a special recall election to replace
then-Governor Gray Davis. Arnold Schwarzenegger was sworn
in on November 17, 2003, to serve the remainder of Davis's term.
Schwarzenegger was then reelected on November 7, 2006, in
California's 2006 gubernatorial election, to serve a full term
as governor, defeating Democrat Phil Angelides, who was
California State Treasurer at the time. Schwarzenegger was sworn
in for a second term on January 5, 2007. In May 2004 and
2007, he was named as one of the Time 100 people who help shape
the world.
Arnold Schwarzenegger
DVDs and Movies
The following DVDs
starring actor Arnold Schwarzenegger are available through
Amazon.com.
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The Terminator
Amazon.com
essential video - This is the film that cemented
Schwarzenegger's spot in the action-brawn firmament,
and it was well deserved. He's chilling as the
futuristic cyborg who kills without fear, without
love, without mercy. James Cameron's story and
direction are pared to the bone and all the more
creepy. But don't overlook the contributions of
Linda Hamilton, who more than holds her own as the
Terminator's would-be victim, Sarah Connor--thus
creating, along with Sigourney Weaver in Alien, a
new generation of rugged, clear-thinking female
action stars. It's surprising how well this film
holds up, and how its minimalist, malevolent
violence is actually way scarier than that of its
far more expensive, more effects-laden sequel.
--Anne Hurley
Product Description - In the year 2029, the ruling
super-computer, Skynet, sends an indestructible
cyborg (Arnold Schwarzenegger) back in time to 1984
to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) before she can
fulfill her destiny and save mankind. |
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Terminator 2 - Judgment
Day
Amazon.com
- After he pushed the envelope of computer-generated
special effects in The Abyss, director James Cameron
turned this hotly anticipated sequel to Terminator
into a well-written, action-packed showcase for
advanced special effects and for one of the most
invincible villains ever imagined. Terminator 2:
Judgment Day is a legitimate sequel: there's more
story to tell about a hulking, leather-clad android
(Arnold Schwarzenegger) who arrives from the future
to protect a rebellious teenager and future leader
(Edward Furlong) from being killed by the tenacious
T-1000 robot (Robert Patrick), whose liquid-metal
construction makes him seemingly unstoppable. The
fate of the future lies in the balance, with Linda
Hamilton (who would later marry her director)
reprising her role as the rugged woman whose son
will change the course of history. --Jeff Shannon |
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Terminator 3 - Rise of
the Machines
Product
Description - A decade has passed since John Connor
(NICK STAHL) helped prevent Judgment Day and save
mankind from mass destruction. Now 25 Connor lives
"off the grid" - no home no credit cards no cell
phone and no job. No record of his existence. No way
he can be traced by Skynet - the highly developed
network of machines that once tried to kill him and
wage war on humanity. Until out of the shadows of
the future steps the T-X (KRISTANNA LOKEN) Skynet's
most sophisticated cyborg killing machine yet. Sent
back through time to complete the job left
unfinished by her predecessor the T-1000 this
machine is as relentless as her human guise is
beautiful. Now Connor's only hope for survival is
the Terminator (ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER) his
mysterious former assassin. Together they must
triumph over the technologically superior T-X and
forestall the looming threat of Judgment Day - or
face the apocalypse and the fall of civilization as
we know it.Format: BLU-RAY DISC |
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Total Recall
Amazon.com
- This science fiction blockbuster from 1990 began
its production life as a very different movie than
the one that was released. An adaptation of the
Philip K. Dick short story "We Can Remember It for
You Wholesale," Total Recall was originally
conceived of with Richard Dreyfuss starring as a
Walter Mitty-like character who experiences a
variety of artificially induced fantasies. The movie
we know is a mega-budget action epic set on Mars.
Arnold Schwarzenegger plays a normal working man who
discovers that his entire reality has been invented
to conceal a plot of planetary domination.
Oscar-winning special effects and violent action
propel the twisting plot, in which Arnold
manipulates his manipulators in a world of dazzling
high technology. Director Paul Verhoeven (Robocop)
indulges his usual penchant for gratuitous
bloodshed, but the movie has enough cleverness to
rise above its excesses. --Jeff Shannon |
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Predator
Amazon.com
essential video - Rambo meets Alien in this terrific
science-fiction thriller from 1987, directed by John
McTiernan just a year before Die Hard made him
Hollywood's most sought-after director of
action-packed blockbusters. Arnold Schwarzenegger
leads an elite squad of U.S. Army commandos to a
remote region of South American jungle, where
they've been assigned to search for South American
officials who've been kidnapped by terrorists.
Instead they find a bunch of skinned corpses hanging
from the trees and realize that they're now facing a
mysterious and much deadlier threat. As the squad is
picked off one by one, Arnold finds himself pitted
against a hideous alien creature that's heavily
armed and wearing a spacesuit enabling the creature
to render itself invisible. The title says it all in
describing the relentless, escalating action that
follows, maintained by McTiernan with an abundance
of visual flair. The film's special effects are
still impressive, and stunning locations in the
Mexican jungles create a combined atmosphere of
verdant beauty and imminent danger. The plot doesn't
hold up to much scrutiny, but the movie's so
exciting and tightly paced that its weaknesses seem
irrelevant. --Jeff Shannon |
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True Lies
Amazon.com
essential video - From The Terminator to Titanic,
you can always rely on writer-director James Cameron
to show you something you've never seen on the big
screen before. The guy may not consistently pen the
most scintillating dialogue in the world (and,
especially in this movie, he doesn't seem to have a
particularly high regard for women), but as a
director of kinetic, push-the-envelope action
sequences, he is in a class by himself. In True
Lies, the highlight is a breathtaking third-act jet
and car chase through the Florida Keys. Arnold
Schwarzenegger plays a covert intelligence agent
whose wife of 15 years (Jamie Lee Curtis) finally
finds out that he's not really a computer salesman
and who becomes mixed up in a case involving nuclear
arms smuggling. Tom Arnold is surprisingly funny and
engaging as Schwarzenegger's longtime spy partner,
and Bill Paxton is a smarmy used-car salesman (is
that redundant?) whom Arnold thinks is having an
affair with his wife. Purely in terms of spectacular
action and high-tech hardware, True Lies is a blast.
--Jim Emerson |
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Eraser
Amazon.com
- If you're going to submit yourself to a dazzling
example of mainstream action, this thriller is as
good a choice as any. Eraser is a live-action
cartoon, the kind of movie in which Arnold
Schwarzenegger can survive nail bombs, hails of
bullets, an attack by voracious alligators ("You're
luggage," he says, after killing one of the beasts),
and still emerge from the mayhem relatively intact.
Arnold plays an "eraser" from the Federal Witness
Protection Program, so named because he can
virtually erase the existence of anyone he's been
assigned to protect. His latest beneficiary is an
FBI employee (Vanessa Williams) who stumbled across
a secret government group involved in the sale and
export of an advanced weapon capable of shooting
rounds at nearly the speed of light. Fantastic
action sequences are handled with flair by director
Charles Russell (The Mask), so it's easy to forgive
the fact that this movie is almost completely
ridiculous. --Jeff Shannon
Product Description - Arnold Schwarzenegger stars as
Eraser, an elite federal marshal who "erases" the
pasts of jeopardized informers and relocates them
into safe anonymity. |
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Amazon.com -
For a movie about cloning, it's only appropriate
that The 6th Day, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, is
instilled with a strong sense of déjà vu, namely
from Arnold's previous "Who am I?" outing, Total
Recall. In that movie, Arnold is a normal Joe who
discovers that his entire reality has been co-opted
by an evil conspiracy, and has to take his life back
by force. The same premise applies here for Roger
Spottiswoode's clever if overlong sci-fi
thriller--Arnold thinks he's a regular guy leading a
regular life, until a twist of fate puts him on the
lam from a vast conspiracy that's replaced him with
a clone. While he's trying to evade the evil
genetics corporation--and its trendy, deadly,
clone-friendly assassins (who don't care how many
times they're killed: there's more where that came
from)--his double is snuggling at home with his wife
and daughter. And new legislation outlaws the
existence of human clones, so somebody's got to go.
But who gets to be live and who gets to be the dead
Memorex man?
Why does said genetics corporation want to clone
people? How does the kindly scientist (Robert
Duvall) fit in? What's the mystery behind the slick
billionaire (Tony Goldwyn) who runs everything? It's
all kind of irrelevant in the end, as long as it
provides a chance for Arnold to indulge in some
energetic mayhem and explosive action. What
distinguishes The 6th Day is its sneaky,
humorous--and chilling--look at the near future,
taking everyday technological advances and turning
them up just a couple notches, envisioning an era
with cloned pets, virtual girlfriends, and computers
running most everything, from the refrigerator to
your car. Arnold is supposed to be a throwback to
the "real" world--you can tell because he cherishes
his vintage, navigation-system-free Cadillac--but as
usual, he just brings his behemoth presence to the
role and not much else. Still, he's a friendly
enough hero, and he rolls with the punches
(literally) all the way through to the end. Too bad
the film overstays its welcome by about half an
hour--a little shorter and it could have been a
breezy sci-fi/action romp. With scene stealers
Michael Rooker, Sarah Wynter, and Rod Rowland as the
trio of cloned assassins who always come back--again
and again. --Mark Englehart |
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The Running Man
Amazon.com
- In this action thriller based on an early story by
Stephen King, Los Angeles in the year 2017 has
become a police state in the wake of the global
economy's total collapse. All forms of entertainment
are government controlled, and the most popular show
on television is an elaborate game show in which
convicted criminals are given a chance to escape by
running through a gauntlet of brutal killers known
as "Stalkers." Anyone who survives is given their
freedom and a condominium in Hawaii, so when a
wrongly accused citizen (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is
chosen as a contestant, all hell breaks loose.
Cheesy sets and a slimy role for game-show host
Richard Dawson make this violent mess of mayhem a
candidate for guilty pleasure; it is the kind of
movie that truly devoted Arnold fans will want to
watch more than once. And check those
credits--choreography by Paula Abdul! --Jeff Shannon |
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Conan the Barbarian
Conan the
Barbarian, the movie that turned Arnold
Schwarzenegger into a global superstar, is a prime
example of a match made in heaven. It's the movie
that macho maverick writer-director John Milius was
born to make, and Arnold was genetically engineered
for his role as the muscle-bound, angst-ridden hero
created in Robert E. Howard's pulp novels. Oliver
Stone contributed to Milius's screenplay, and the
production design by comic artist Ron Cobb
represents a perfect cinematic realization of
Howard's fantasy world. To avenge the murder of his
parents, Conan tracks down the evil Thulsa Doom
(James Earl Jones) with the help of Queen Valeria
(played by buff B-movie vixen Sandahl Bergman) and
Subotai the Mongol (Gerry Lopez). Aptly described by
critic Roger Ebert as "the perfect fantasy for the
alienated pre-adolescent," this blockbuster is just
as enjoyable for adults who haven't lost their
youthful imagination. --Jeff Shannon
Conan the
Destroyer
The
dark, brooding tone of Conan the Barbarian is
replaced in this rousing sequel by a lighter, more
humorous tone and one of the campiest casts ever
assembled. This time, Conan is assigned by a
duplicitous queen (Sarah Douglas) to escort a virgin
princess (Olivia d'Abo) on a treacherous trek to a
crystal palace where they will retrieve a priceless
gemstone. Basketball champ and self-described
Lothario Wilt Chamberlain plays Bombaata, a warrior
sent on a secret mission to kill Conan, and the
androgynous Grace Jones plays Zula, a wild woman who
becomes Conan's loyal ally. Some consider this
sequel a disappointment, but the film makes no
apologies for its silliness, and that's the key to
its success as gloriously pulpy entertainment.
--Jeff Shannon |
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Arnold Schwarzenegger DVDs and Videos
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