Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III 4K 1993 Ultra HD 2160p
April bought Splinter an antique Japanese scepter at a sale, along with other gifts for her turtle friends. As it turned out, this scepter was not just an ordinary antique, but a prototype of a time machine. However, it only works when the weight of the time travelers is the same on both sides.
As it happened, the scepter transported April to feudal Japan in 1603. The turtles followed her, but instead of ending up in the temple where the scepter was supposed to be, they found themselves in the middle of a battlefield. In all this confusion, Michelangelo gets lost with the scepter. Now the turtles not only have to save April, but also return the scepter. In our time, things are not boring either.
User Review
After the impressive commercial success of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sequel, it was only a matter of time before the third installment hit the big screen.
As you may have noticed, for some inexplicable mystical reason, all trilogies of superhero franchises, without exception, are utter trash: Superman III, Batman Forever, RoboCop 3, Spider-Man: Enemy Within'. The green reptilian mutant jokers from the Brooklyn sewer tunnels did not escape this fate either. This time, desperate third-rate director Stuart Gillard, known to viewers primarily for the rather bloody environmental horror film The Creature of Peter Benchley, which he also wrote himself, decided to try his luck in the market for superhero trilogy projects. Armed with a very solid budget of $21 million in 1993 and after working on the script for a couple of months, Gillard gave birth not to a film, but to a real freak.
The action begins with a very silly dance by the Turtles to some nasty 80s pop music. When we are transported to medieval Japan, the picture becomes a hundred times worse. The action takes place in cardboard-and-cotton-wool landscapes, executed exclusively in the style of Ed Wood. You start to feel nauseous literally 20 minutes into the film. Throughout the entire film, you have to “admire” the muddy camera work, crude models of medieval weapons, and utterly pathetic special effects. Honestly, even in the frankly trashy Evil Dead 3: Army of Darkness, the picture was much nicer. You can only enjoy all this if you have an unwavering desire to be transported back to the atmosphere of 90s films. Honestly, you're better off rewatching the sequel.
Info Video
Codec: HEVC / H.265 (91.8 Mb/s)
Resolution: Native 4K (2160p)
HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Info Audio
#English: FLAC 2.0
#English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
#English: Dolby Digital 2.0 (Commentary with Director Stuart Gillard)
Info Subtitles
English.File size: 65.11 GB











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