Watch: Code 8 Part II 2024 123movies, Full Movie Online – Follows a girl fighting to get justice for her brother who was slain by corrupt police officers. She enlists the help of an ex-con and his former partner to face off against a highly regarded and well-protected police sergeant..
Plot: In a world where superpowered people are heavily policed by robots, an ex-con teams up with a drug lord he despises to protect a teen from a corrupt cop.
Smart Tags: N/A
123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day
5.7/10 Votes: 14,422 | |
73% | RottenTomatoes | |
N/A | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 562 Popularity: 57.264 | TMDB |
The first Code 8 movie, was never going to be an award winner but at least it had an element of danger, pacing and excitement.Regrettably, its sequel, seems to be more a vehicle for woke tropes than an actual sci fi film. It appears to be mostly about people from diverse backgrounds being either abused by “the system” or co-opted into it, as state sponsored abusers.
The results feels like what it is. A moral statement viewed from a particular point of view, rather than an exciting, sci fi film, which is what, in this reviewers opinion, it should have been.
Its slow paced, not terribly exciting and really goes nowhere interesting but then, how could it?
In summary, I, for one, am sick and tired of having simple escapist entertainment hi-jacked to peddle a specific world view. That is what activism and social commentary are for. Of course, the irony too, is the harder this kind of thing is foisted on people, in my experience, the more they tend to reject it.
This was a lot of Code 8 to watch in a short period of time. I definitely skipped through large portions of this film. It seemed like the first film. I maybe should not have watched the first film. Aibo was a dumb idea. Super cute and sweet ending. Fun sequences. A little long.
Good idea, terrible writing
I love sci-fi and like the general concept… I like the world this story lives in.. What I hate is the plot, writing… Oh the writing. It’s atrocious.Ok so one example… Homeboy needs help to remove a bullet… It’s meant to be a big moment where they decide to help him…. And what help exactly does he need to remove the bullet? Pull my shirt down while I pull the bullet out myself. Lmao ???? Who wrote this nonsense? Does nobody proof read this stuff?
The characters? You won’t care about them much. The lead acts like a spoiled brat for the entirety of the film.
Special effects are good… But the sound of the robot dogs? Sounds like a robot elephant walking around… Not exactly great for sneaking around.
There are moments where the characters forget they have powers when they are in precarious situations.
As much as I want to like this … It’s garbage. Good idea… Terrible execution.
Why should anyone care about these characters?
Great special effects, for a realism trying cgi movie. But, the constant question I found asking is, if almost every decision made by every character is the wrong one, and the 2 main characters screw up every chance, why do I care what they do? Found the gang leader was actually likable, he talked to everyone, made his intentions clear, and even when the calelion character screws up tries to let him save some face. But, the brothers plan is to rob the head honco, he leaves his backpack, forgets to zip up the money bag, makes noise everywhere, and generally is a terrible character to try to relate to outside of taking care of his sister. The sister, after waiting for 2hrs, does not use a phone and decides to go outside first thing, I’m not going to even get into her messing with the K9 unit right off the bat (why didn’t that flag through the handler immediately). She impulsive, mean, and demonstrates 0 want to try to overall help the situation. I know the Cardinal rule is, don’t put a kid in a movie for any reason outside of the kid drives the movie, but this is the point where the kid drives the movie, and I could care less about the kid. This character makes elle from last of us seem like a genius comedian, and I get it a sad movie. But, that doesn’t mean all the characters have to be sad beaten people. If you’ve been in a sad life place you learn pretty quick that being upset and mad all the time only alienates people. They don’t need or want to care about you, and the same is true for this movie. First one was pretty good, this not so much, but I hope they get it better with the 3rd if they make it.
Original Language en
Runtime N/A
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated TV-MA
Genre Action, Crime, Drama
Director Jeff Chan
Writer Chris Pare, Jeff Chan, Sherren Lee
Actors Robbie Amell, Stephen Amell, Alex Mallari Jr.
Country Canada, United States
Awards 2 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A
Watch: Code 8 Part II 2024 123movies, Full Movie Online – Follows a girl fighting to get justice for her brother who was slain by corrupt police officers. She enlists the help of an ex-con and his former partner to face off against a highly regarded and well-protected police sergeant..
Plot: In a world where superpowered people are heavily policed by robots, an ex-con teams up with a drug lord he despises to protect a teen from a corrupt cop.
Smart Tags: N/A
123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day
5.7/10 Votes: 14,422 | |
73% | RottenTomatoes | |
N/A | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 562 Popularity: 57.264 | TMDB |
The first Code 8 movie, was never going to be an award winner but at least it had an element of danger, pacing and excitement.Regrettably, its sequel, seems to be more a vehicle for woke tropes than an actual sci fi film. It appears to be mostly about people from diverse backgrounds being either abused by “the system” or co-opted into it, as state sponsored abusers.
The results feels like what it is. A moral statement viewed from a particular point of view, rather than an exciting, sci fi film, which is what, in this reviewers opinion, it should have been.
Its slow paced, not terribly exciting and really goes nowhere interesting but then, how could it?
In summary, I, for one, am sick and tired of having simple escapist entertainment hi-jacked to peddle a specific world view. That is what activism and social commentary are for. Of course, the irony too, is the harder this kind of thing is foisted on people, in my experience, the more they tend to reject it.
This was a lot of Code 8 to watch in a short period of time. I definitely skipped through large portions of this film. It seemed like the first film. I maybe should not have watched the first film. Aibo was a dumb idea. Super cute and sweet ending. Fun sequences. A little long.
Good idea, terrible writing
I love sci-fi and like the general concept… I like the world this story lives in.. What I hate is the plot, writing… Oh the writing. It’s atrocious.Ok so one example… Homeboy needs help to remove a bullet… It’s meant to be a big moment where they decide to help him…. And what help exactly does he need to remove the bullet? Pull my shirt down while I pull the bullet out myself. Lmao ???? Who wrote this nonsense? Does nobody proof read this stuff?
The characters? You won’t care about them much. The lead acts like a spoiled brat for the entirety of the film.
Special effects are good… But the sound of the robot dogs? Sounds like a robot elephant walking around… Not exactly great for sneaking around.
There are moments where the characters forget they have powers when they are in precarious situations.
As much as I want to like this … It’s garbage. Good idea… Terrible execution.
Not bad, but still a bit of a let-down
While the original ‘Code 8’ movie (as well as the original short film) certainly wasn’t perfect, its biggest strength was in its storytelling and being able to accomplish a lot with very little. This is best exemplified by the montage that plays over the opening credits of that film of fake documentary clips and news reports detailing the history of the fictional Lincoln City and how those with powers went from being exploited by the “normal” population to build the city to being feared by them when they were no longer considered useful, and thus being largely forced into degrading menial work that pays pitifully or else turn to various avenues of criminality in order to make ends meet. This set up not only the world of the movie but the central conflict for the main character perfectly in the span of about 5 minutes. By contrast, the sequel tries doing the exact same thing (producing a condensed version of the previous opening with added exposition about the “guardian” robots of the last film being replaced with supposedly safer “K9s” in this one) bur it ultimately falls flat since very little in the film actually follows up on the issues presented in this opening montage.It’s almost as though the film couldn’t quite decide whether it wanted to be a direct continuation of the first one, dealing with the fallout of everything that happened between Garrett and Connor, or a completely new story set in the same universe; in the end, it winds up being an extremely awkward combination of the two. The Garrett/Connor conflict is, at least to me, the far more interesting storyline that we’re presented with, largely due to the Amell cousins inevitably having great chemistry as actors and it actually justifying the movie being a sequel rather than a spinoff, but even that has its share of issues as the film has Connor deciding to put his trust in Garrett far too times and far too easily despite the very first scene demonstrating that he had already learned his lesson on that front.
As for the main storyline of the girl, her brother and the cop…I’ll be honest, it’s very difficult to care about any of them. The girl especially is clearly supposed to function as the emotional core of the movie but she’s ultimately little more than a living McGuffin (i.e. A filmmaking term to describe a thing that everyone wants but is never fully explored beyond that). We learn next to nothing about either her or her brother except that…they’re poor, he’s Garrett’s latest betrayal-minded protégé (you’d think after Connor and the first movie he’d have learned to be at least a bit more careful on that front) and she’s apparently supposed to be clever. And she’s special because she has a one-in-a-million power that does very little but serve as a plot device and only becomes somewhat useful in the last few minutes of the film. The cop is a little more interesting, though he falls a bit too quickly into all-out comic-book villain territory for my taste. The other new characters that are introduced either don’t make much of an impact either way and/or are copies of characters from the first movie (Garrett’s even got himself an all-new and almost completely identical gang, right down to their powers).
Overall, it’s a film with good acting, decent effects (though to my mind, they’re not as seamless as the first one), good cinematography for the most part, but is let down tremendously by the writing and general plotting of the story. Ideally, you want events in a story to move seamlessly from one thing to another based on the decisions of the characters…which in turn are derived from their personalities; here, it’s more like events jumping from one to another with very little connecting them (for example, Connor finds the girl at the community centre where he works and she clearly doesn’t trust him…then in the space of a jump cut, he’s somehow got her inside and she’s happy to go with him based on a mostly-offscreen conversation with a character she’s never met before – at least onscreen – and the audience barely knows). And talking of events not naturally appearing to follow on from each other, the ending is just…bad.
If you liked the first one, I’d say it’s worth watching this one if only for the majority of the Connor/Garrett storyline but it’s not necessarily a film to go out of your way to see.
Original Language en
Runtime N/A
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated TV-MA
Genre Action, Crime, Drama
Director Jeff Chan
Writer Chris Pare, Jeff Chan, Sherren Lee
Actors Robbie Amell, Stephen Amell, Alex Mallari Jr.
Country Canada, United States
Awards 2 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A