HERE IS THE SUMMARY FOR THE MOVIE BATTLE LA FROM IMDB
A Marine platoon faces off against an alien invasion in Los Angeles.
HERE IS A REVIEW FOR THE MOVIE BATTLE LA FROM DVDTALK.
Aliens have attacked Earth, leaving the locals stunned and shaken as vicious armies rise from the oceans to begin their extermination of human life. On the ground, a team of Marines has been assembled to help evacuate Santa Monica before it's blasted into oblivion to halt advancing alien activity, with Staff Sergeant Michael Nantz (Aaron Eckhart) called back into duty after a troubling history in Afghanistan. Storming the city, the platoon encounters numerous alien warriors and ships armed with immense firepower and technical superiority. Struggling to survive, the team comes across a few frightened civilians (including Bridget Moynahan and Michael Pena) they must protect, finding the road to rescue blocked by a relentless enemy that's difficult to kill.
"Battle: Los Angeles" is a lot of noise covering for very minimal substance. There's a script credited to Christopher Bertolini, but I don't exactly understand what he's responsible for. The dialogue and plot highlight a hornet's nest of clichés, pulled from every last war film, spending the opening 15 minutes of the feature developing faceless characters of no discernable personality before the carnage begins. Only Nantz is handed an arc to explore, but it's a hoary beast concerning a broken leader rekindling his inner fight, rising to lead his boys to victory. The rest of the platoon is filled with unknown actors counted on to continually scream and grunt, waiting for their eventual death at the hands of a special effect. Instead of intensely investing in the Marines and their individual quirks (think "Aliens"), Liebesman plays the group as nondescript as possible, hunting for sobering realism while sacrificing engaging cinema along the way.
"Battle: Los Angeles" finally hits a more blockbuster tone in the final act, where the squad takes on an enormous alien control ship using all of their resources and military instinct. It's a case of too little too late, breezing past a substantial threat (or final boss level) to madly dash toward the anti-ending, where the story intends to carry on into numerous sequels, maybe exploring skirmishes in additional Los Angeles suburbs, I don't know. Perhaps if more concentration was put into building an engrossing, impassioned first installment, this allegedly global invasion would be an event worthy of a franchise. Instead, "Battle: Los Angeles" is a tiresome fireworks display starring a cast of cardboard cutouts, quick to make a visceral fuss but frustratingly negligent when it comes to providing a reason to care.
HERE IS THE DIRECT DOWNLOAD FOR THE MOVIE BATTLE LA (NEWSBIN FILE).