End Of Days
Universal Pictures (1999)
Horror, Fantasy, Thriller, Action
In Collection
#462
0*
Seen ItNo
025195041768
IMDB   5.8
122 mins USA / English
Blu-ray  Region Free   US - R
Arnold Schwarzenegger Jericho
Gabriel Byrne The Man
Robin Tunney Christine
Kevin Pollak Chicago
CCH Pounder Detective Marge Francis
Derrick O'Connor Thomas Aquinas
David Weisenberg OB-GYN
Rainer Judd Christine's Mother
Miriam Margolyes Mabel
Udo Kier Head Priest
Luciano Miele Pope's Advisor
Michael O'Hagan Cardinal
Mark Margolis Pope
Jack Shearer Kellogg
Rod Steiger Father Kovak
Eve Sigall Old Woman
Victor Varnado Albino
Robert Lesser Carson
Lloyd Garroway Utility Worker #1
Gary Anthony Williams Utility Worker #2
Director
Peter Hyams
Producer Marc Abraham
Armyan Bernstein
Thomas A. Bliss
Bill Borden
Writer Andrew W. Marlowe
Cinematography Peter Hyams
Musician John Debney


On 28 December 1999, the citizens of New York City are getting ready for the turn of the millennium. However, Satan decides to crash the party by coming to the city and searching for his chosen bride — a 20-year-old woman named Christine York. The world will end, and the only hope lies within an atheist named Jericho Cane.
Edition Details
Distributor Universal
Release Date 8/16/2011
Packaging HD Case
Screen Ratio Theatrical Widescreen (2.35:1)
Subtitles French; Spanish; English (SDH)
Audio Tracks DTS 5.1 [French]
DTS 5.1 [Spanish]
DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 [English]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Discs/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Links IMDB
TheMovieDb.org
MovieMeter.nl

Features
End of Days comes to Blu-ray with a commentary track from director Peter Hyams as the sole extra. Hyams waits some 90 seconds to begin speaking, and starts the track with a discussion of John Debney's (Sin City) score. Hyams delves into standard territory throughout the track, offering listeners more of a technical rundown of the look and feel of the movie, focusing on sets, filming techniques, filming locations, and even admitting to a "cheap trick" in one scene. Hyams describes Arnold as "vulnerable" in this picture, a fitting description. Later in the track, he discusses how to play off of Arnold Schwarzenegger during a key moment in the film and the sadistic nature of the Gabriel Byrnes character. Hyams' track is a decent one, but it is also a track not too many will give a listen to, and even the hardcore Arnold or End of Days fans will find it rather dull.