Battleship -2012-2012 ((exclusive)) Info
For those searching here is the exact narrative as it unfolded on screens that summer:
: During a naval exercise (RIMPAC), a mysterious alien craft lands in the Pacific, creating a massive energy shield that traps several destroyers inside. Battleship -2012-2012
That was the first 2012. The one of fire and failure. For those searching here is the exact narrative
During the RIMPAC (Rim of the Pacific) exercises near Hawaii, NASA transmits a signal to a newly discovered exoplanet dubbed "Planet G." The signal is answered by an alien armada. One of the massive alien ships crashes into Hong Kong, while the others land in the Pacific Ocean, deploying an immense force field that traps three destroyers—including Alex’s ship, the USS John Paul Jones —inside. During the RIMPAC (Rim of the Pacific) exercises
Conversely, the aliens are the film’s weakest link. The search query excludes the year, so we can focus purely on design. The aliens are bipedal, humanoid, and wear exo-suits that make them look like rejected Halo villains. Their motivation is never explained. Are they vanguard scouts? Refugees? Terraformers? The film does not care. They exist to fire weird, bouncing projectiles that look like yo-yos. Interestingly, the film reveals they communicate through non-verbal gestures and have a form of honor: when a human saves an alien’s life, the alien hesitates to kill. It is a theme introduced and abandoned within thirty seconds.
The genius of the adaptation—which the "2012" release date often obscures—is the visual translation of the board game. When an electromagnetic field deploys around the Hawaiian islands, isolating three U.S. Navy vessels, the abstract concept of the game’s "grid" becomes literal. The humans cannot see the enemy. They fire based on radar pings and coordinates. "C-3." "Hit." It is absurd. It is glorious.
