---
product_id: 166626686
title: "Terminator: Dark Fate [Blu-ray]"
price: "COP 88807"
currency: COP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.co/products/166626686-terminator-dark-fate-blu-ray
store_origin: CO
region: Colombia
---

# Terminator: Dark Fate [Blu-ray]

**Price:** COP 88807
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Terminator: Dark Fate [Blu-ray]
- **How much does it cost?** COP 88807 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co](https://www.desertcart.co/products/166626686-terminator-dark-fate-blu-ray)

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- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
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## Description

Decades after Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) prevented Judgment Day, a lethal new Terminator is sent to eliminate the future leader of the resistance. In a fight to save mankind, battle-hardened Sarah Connor teams up with an unexpected ally (Arnold Schwarzenegger) and an enhanced super soldier to stop the deadliest Terminator yet. Humanity's fate hangs in the balance in this action-packed thrill ride from Tim Miller, the Director of Deadpool, and Producer James Cameron.

Review: Terminate this - DVD, Good film transfer and decent extras. Movie, just another good example of how Hollywood can make a decent PC action film but no one will go see it. Great or better addition to the franchise and a good end for the T800. Mackenzie Davis is awesome.
Review: What a terrific movie follow up. - Watch T2 Judgement Day first and then this movie. It fits in perfectly story wise. Make sense. Lots of loud and fast action. Definitely worth every penny!!!

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Arnold Schwarzenegger, Diego Boneta, Gabriel Luna, Linda Hamilton, Mackenzie Davis, Natalia Reyes, Tim Miller Contributor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Diego Boneta, Gabriel Luna, Linda Hamilton, Mackenzie Davis, Natalia Reyes, Tim Miller See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 11,025 Reviews |
| Format | Widescreen |
| Genre | Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 2 hours and 8 minutes |

## Product Details

- **Format:** Widescreen
- **Genre:** Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy
- **Language:** English
- **Runtime:** 2 hours and 8 minutes

## Images

![Terminator: Dark Fate [Blu-ray] - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81jH4og5vQL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Terminate this
*by D***R on April 29, 2026*

DVD, Good film transfer and decent extras. Movie, just another good example of how Hollywood can make a decent PC action film but no one will go see it. Great or better addition to the franchise and a good end for the T800. Mackenzie Davis is awesome.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ What a terrific movie follow up.
*by U***N on April 9, 2026*

Watch T2 Judgement Day first and then this movie. It fits in perfectly story wise. Make sense. Lots of loud and fast action. Definitely worth every penny!!!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Dark Fate isn't T2, but it also kind of is.
*by L***R on March 6, 2020*

I'm not going to sit here and individually dissect the popular arguments passed around by detractors. I'm not. This is one of those cases where it seems as though the people who hated the film were probably halfway to disliking it before they even sat down in the theater, and there's SO much criticism out there that reeks of the regurgitated loathing you see in unpoliced comments sections. There's no fighting that, and, if you're already determined to dislike the film, I'm never going to change your mind. That's okay, though, and you can still read my review even if you're already certain that you'll disagree with it. I'm writing this because *I* enjoyed the film, and the mere idea that other people might also enjoy it keeps my fingers moving. Terminator 2 (practically everyone's favorite Terminator film - even mine) has sat, unmoved and unmolested, on the same dusty pedestal for a good many years, and none of its relatively ill-fated sequels have so much as managed to nudge it. I wouldn't call it perfect, but it certainly left an impression. It's a movie about time traveling killer robots (excuse me, cyborgs) sent naked into the past to either protect or kill someone in particular. It sounds kind of silly when thus reduced, but it's fun, it makes you the good kind of popcorn-scarfing nervous, and the action leaves you both wishing for more and waiting for the next merciful lull. It's not overly different from its similarly fun and silly-in-concept (I reiterate: time traveling killer robots, for goodness sake) predecessor that gave birth to the endoskeleton-sporting series. That's right: I'm still talking about the ever untouchable Terminator 2; one of my all-time favorite films. No, I'm not trying to tear down T2 in order to elevate Dark Fate, but I neither consider T2 as perfect as its fans proclaim nor Dark Fate as irredeemably terrible as, well, T2's fans believe. If you've never seen the other Terminator films, I'm not sure why you'd be compelled to watch and love or hate Dark Fate, but I can claim, with some measure of confidence, that the people spitting the harshest venom are the same people who downright adore T2. It's a great film, and you should watch it - even if it's for the twentieth time. But here's the thing: Dark Fate isn't really that astronomically different from T2, and I think what differences do exist serve the narrative rather than condemn it. Dark Fate is a great film, and you should watch it - even if only once. I wouldn't call it perfect, but here I am writing a review about it. It's a movie about time traveling killer robots (excuse me, cyborgs) sent naked into the past to either protect or kill someone in particular. It sounds kind of silly when thus reduced, but it's fun, it makes you the good kind of popcorn-scarfing nervous, and the action leaves you both wishing for more and waiting for the next merciful lull. (And now you see what I'm doing.) Dark Fate's greatest sin is not its writing, its acting, or its reasoning, and let's face it: the series never stood on an unshakable foundation of logic to begin with. It's been sitting on top of an inextricable paradox (utterly fundamental to the plot) since the first film, and some of the fingers you could point at Dark Fate could probably be pointed, with similar justifications, at the series as a whole. Dark Fate says, "You remember that paradox? You like that paradox?" while tossing its smouldering carcass into an abyss typically suited for the victims of countless creative retcons. That probably sounds like a criticism - it's not. It is, in my opinion, the single best thing about Dark Fate's story direction. Yes, it does a lot of the same things the other films have done, but each and every successive film has parroted moments and themes and dialogue and story lines from the first. Even T2 was essentially more of the same, but it tossed in enough uniquely worthwhile moments and enough twists to make it feel different or new. I appreciate the different path (still operating within the usual confines and parameters of Terminator films) that Dark Fate took. Some people probably interpreted it as more of a slap in the face or a blow to the gut, but (reviewer pauses to access a cumulative emotional databank) yeah, that's Terminator. It's a series built upon widespread death and doom; a glimpsed future of skulls crushed underfoot and a tireless, nigh invincible enemy. It's as dismal as it is horrifying, and that's the idea. Because then you introduce this little fluttering insect called hope, and things suddenly get interesting. Dark Fate ticks all of the same boxes that the other films have ticked. If you hate the first five minutes of Dark Fate, I applaud you for having watched any of the other films for any longer. If you like explosive action, moments of tense uncertainty, or strong characters being strong (and brave and foolish and angry and sad - and human) set before a backdrop of ridiculous, gloomy sci-fi, you had ought to stay for the minutes that come after. There were moments in Dark Fate that affected me as deeply or as viscerally as a well-timed thumbs-up or a nerve-racking semi-and-motorcycle chase, and I got to enjoy them while watching faces new and old. I could go and watch T2 right now (it's a great film - I probably will at some point), but avoiding Dark Fate altogether would only have been my loss. Despite my enduring affection for the previous films, I'm neither angry nor disappointed; I'm just kind of hungry, to tell it true. You see, I didn't stock up on popcorn beforehand, and there isn't a lobby nearby peddling butter-soaked popped kernels. I paid somewhere around twice as much for admission, and I had only my fingers to chew on for the duration. But, against all odds projected on the internets, I had fun. Was it T2 levels of fun? Why the heck would I care? It was a new ride, and I was glad to be on it.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Terminator: Dark Fate [Blu-ray]
- Terminator Genisys [4K UHD]
- Terminator 2: Judgement Day 4K Ultra Hd [Blu-ray] [4K UHD]

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*Product available on Desertcart Colombia*
*Store origin: CO*
*Last updated: 2026-05-29*