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1942, Segunda Guerra Mundial. Después del devastador ataque sorpresa que destruyó Pearl Harbor, la Armada Imperial Japonesa se prepara para un nuevo ataque. Pero el Almirante Nimitz (Woody Harrelson) y Dick Best (Ed Skrein), el mejor piloto de la armada estadounidense, preparan un contraataque al imponente ejército japonés. Dick encabezará un ataque masivo que hará que Japón se dé cuenta de su error. Una decisión que cambió el curso de la historia para siempre. Mientras estos dos titánicos enemigos emprenden una letal batalla para cambiar el rumbo de la guerra, todas las miradas se vuelcan hacia la remota isla de Midway, donde una serie de impactantes ataques aéreos y marítimos pondrán a prueba la potencia y la fortaleza de ambas naciones. (Diamond Films España)

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POMO 

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español Un shooter juvenil que ofrece todo lo que a Emmerich se la da bien: un reparto excelente, una composición pulida y, al final, un patetismo americano exagerado. La trama es desgraciadamente confusa: las estrategias se resuelven sobre los mapas y a veces la continuidad de las escenas de acción no tiene sentido. Ideológicamente prochina también, sin la inversión allí la película probablemente no se habría hecho (nunca habrían venido suficientes espectadores a verla para pagar su ejecución técnica). La parte digital, sobre todo después del reciente (sexto) Terminator, es más que buena. ()

Lima 

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inglés The ideal definition of a three-star film. You watch the central battle – an aggregation of pixels and an abundance of CGI-rendered frames – and catch yourself thinking: I’d rather play computer games than passively watch them. But then you get used to it, and ultimately you’re prepared to admit that the way in which the story is told does, rather surprisingly, have the qualities of an acceptable historical drama. We’re told a rather sparse backstory, which is for the better, and with the exception of the ending, Emmerich doesn’t force unpleasant pathos down our throats, so the net result is noticeably better than (if you allow the comparison) Bay’s Pearl Harbor. The latter was primarily a chick flick, whereas this is a sober and reasonable take on a major event of World War II in the Pacific theater. Nothing groundbreaking, but not a catastrophe either; I’d say Emmerich passes with flying colors. PS: Ed Skrein, well-known for being typecast as a villain, shows he can play nice guys too, when he wants to. Except when he’s chewing like a ruminant (at the beginning of this film) – then you want to punch him in the face :o). ()

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EvilPhoEniX 

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inglés After the failure of Independence Day: Resurgence, Roland Emmerich restores his reputation and serves up a decent war film that won't make a dent in the world, but thanks to familiar faces, dynamic pace and almost uninterrupted action, it's sure to entertain in the cinema, as long you don’t think too much. Of the actors, Ed Skrein stands out the most as the bold and brash pilot who steals most of the scenes for himself, but Luke Evans, Woody Harrelson, Patrick Wilson and Aaron Eckhart are also good, so there are more than enough familiar faces. It's just a pity that they don't work too well with emotions, because there are so many characters that it's almost impossible to form a relationship with any of them. The action is very decent albeit 80% through a green screen, but if you don’t mind a CGI orgy you will get over it. I don't think plane crashes and aerial gunfights have ever been so entertaining and gripping, and I was entertained by the behind-the-scenes of the Japanese. There hasn't been a WW2 war film in the cinema this year, so fans of the genre should be grateful and not hesitate to go. 75% ()

MrHlad 

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inglés Roland Emmerich directed a film with big battles in which the visual effects occasionally are quite dodgy, but otherwise it's an epic spectacle. It's just that when they are not fighting, Midway is pretty rubbish. Mostly because of poor character work, a dysfunctional attempt to evoke some emotion and pathos, and an inability to make interesting characters out of twenty sailors, pilots, and officers. Fans of big war films won't be offended by Midway, but don't expect anything exceptional either. ()

DaViD´82 

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inglés I would never have believed that I would ever write this, but... Good old Bay's Pearl Harbor. Midway is an example of horrible non-art, even by Emmerich's standards. And that surprisingly includes the technical aspect, which usually saves him. I don't remember any film with such horrible dialogue, such poor acting by excellent actors (let alone non-actors). CGI is overused and lame here. And so there are common scenes where the actors do not fit into the picture or when the ships/aircraft/islands/clouds in the background are so scattered and blurry that even many retro movies would be ashamed of it. An unbelievable goof for a film that is nothing but effects. When they are no longer babbling and saying one cliché after another with a straight face, then there is action. Frequent, excessive, dumb. It's closer to X-Wings battling TIE Fighters than anything historical that would be at least partially rooted in reality and the laws of physics. There is so much extreme craziness going on here all the time that if someone put a reverse gear on the plane and just flew backwards, it wouldn't seem out of place at all. That is,  action that's unwatchable both visually and due to its content and uncharismatic characters from the ranks of the supremely unlikable. Compared to Emmerich´s other movies, it's not a clear guilty pleasure, because this time it's not (un)intentionally stupid, it's just desperately unwatchable and annoyingly long. The only slightly decent storyline is the one involving Yamamota/Nimitz, but that's all. ()

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