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Star Trek Beyond
As the USS Enterprise continues its travels through deep space on a five-year assignment, Captain James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) is growing restless. However, when the Enterprise is attacked, and Kirk and his crew are left stranded on an uncharted and dangerous planet, the captain must use every resource he can find to save his crew and get back to his original mission.
ClearPlay in Action
There is scattered offensive language in this movie, mostly by Bones (Karl Urban). There are also some violent deaths and injuries that the filters can tone down. Sexual relationships are implied, but not shown and Kirk and his crew drink alcoholic beverages. It’s all very PG-13 in tone, but it’s still more edgy than the original series and Star Trek movies.
So Does this Movie Boldly Go Where No Movie Has Gone Before?
While I am not a Trekkie, I have enjoyed each film in the rebooted series and Star Trek Beyond is no exception. This is a fun movie. It’s directed by Justin Lin (from the Fast & Furious series), so you can expect plenty of action and plenty of ridiculousness, as well as some pandering to the Star Trek fans. This franchise still has some life left in it.
Joel Hilton – ClearPlay Redshirt
Glass
Following the events of Unbreakable and Split, Glass concludes the story of David Dunn (Bruce Willis), the invulnerable man, Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson), the fragile genius, and Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy), the man with twenty-four personalities, including a horrifying one called The Beast.
ClearPlay in Action
Glass is rated PG-13 for violence, disturbing images and scattered language. ClearPlay can clean up this movie and leave no unsightly streaks behind. The filters will wipe away three instances of crude content, up to 20 potentially offensive words, including three S-words, along with seven vain references to deity. They can also remove 24 violent scenes of people being shot, crushed and, shockingly, eaten.
Once this Glass is sparkling clean, it can be viewed by almost any member of the family, though younger viewers may find this dramatic and dark version of a superhero movie to be a little boring.
So Is this Finale Polished?
Glass left me feeling half empty. I really enjoyed most of the movie, but then it decided to go off the rails. I was willing to overlook the clunky exposition and monologuing right up until the ending happened. I'm not going to spoil anything, but I will say that it seems that M. Night Shyamalan was so determined to surprise the audience that he forgot how to conclude a story in a satisfying way. It's a shame, really. This had the potential to be one of the greatest film trilogies of our time.
Joel Hilton – ClearPlay Asylum Attendant
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© 2018 CLEARPLAY INC. Patents: 9,628,852; 6,889,383; 6,898,799; 7,526,784; 7,543,318; 7,577,970; 7,975,021; 8,117,282. More Pending
Glass
Following the events of Unbreakable and Split, Glass concludes the story of David Dunn (Bruce Willis), the invulnerable man, Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson), the fragile genius, and Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy), the man with twenty-four personalities, including a horrifying one called The Beast.
ClearPlay in Action
Glass is rated PG-13 for violence, disturbing images and scattered language. ClearPlay can clean up this movie and leave no unsightly streaks behind. The filters will wipe away three instances of crude content, up to 20 potentially offensive words, including three S-words, along with seven vain references to deity. They can also remove 24 violent scenes of people being shot, crushed and, shockingly, eaten.
Once this Glass is sparkling clean, it can be viewed by almost any member of the family, though younger viewers may find this dramatic and dark version of a superhero movie to be a little boring.
So Is this Finale Polished?
Glass left me feeling half empty. I really enjoyed most of the movie, but then it decided to go off the rails. I was willing to overlook the clunky exposition and monologuing right up until the ending happened. I'm not going to spoil anything, but I will say that it seems that M. Night Shyamalan was so determined to surprise the audience that he forgot how to conclude a story in a satisfying way. It's a shame, really. This had the potential to be one of the greatest film trilogies of our time.
Joel Hilton – ClearPlay Asylum Attendant
In theaters May 3, 2018
00 days 00 hrs 00 mins 00 secs
Blu-ray Available (Feb 9,2018)
DVD Available (Feb 9,2018)
Other Formats
Blu-ray No
DVD No
Other Formats