In
2007 (three years later) with new directors and the same Amalgamated Dynamics
effects team, the story kicks off moments after the previous one with a chestburster coming out of a Predator.
This
is a dark film.
I
don’t mean philosophically, although the mayhem is ratcheted up to return to an
R rating and beyond in the unrated cut.
The first chestburster in a child will do that.
I
mean from a lighting standpoint. It’s almost impossible to see anything in this
movie, which is a shame.
My
advice: crank the brightness to maximum and enjoy the carnage!
This
movie suffered through a bunch of dumping on, and I don’t understand why. None of the previous films are cinematic
masterpieces of symbolism and deep worth.
They’re monster movies. And this
outing finally got a few things right.
First,
as a Predator fan I feel the need to point out the title Aliens (Plural) Vs.
Predator (Singular). The Xenomorphs are
massing, and a single Yautja, with all his awesome high tech gear and super
strength has been called in to face them.
Some of that gear, introduced in the last film -such as the new, multi
bladed, Krull like disk, gets
impressive new uses. Others, like the laser mines, are unique to this outing.
The
plasma shotgun was wicked cool too!
Yes,
we finally get one of these bad boys at the peak of his skills. Not a teenager,
not on his first hunt; he’s an
experienced Xenomorph clean up expert. Bonus points for a peek at the Predator
homeworld! Humans are little more than a nuisance to him, as demonstrated quite
awesomely when he casually pops off the two jerks' heads with a double shoulder plasma
cannon blast in the sporting goods store.
Wolf (as the film makers dubbed him) is there to remove Alien evidence no matter what’s in the way. They did make sure to illustrate the species’ sense of honor in the graveyard scene when he nonchalantly wastes the guy waving a gun at a child.
Wolf (as the film makers dubbed him) is there to remove Alien evidence no matter what’s in the way. They did make sure to illustrate the species’ sense of honor in the graveyard scene when he nonchalantly wastes the guy waving a gun at a child.
Ian Whyte is back as Wolf, and his
Predatorness has improved with practice.
And he is back to being truly one uuugly mother…
Even for an Alien flick, this is a
gory and horrific one.
But it’s a horror movie.
The goal of horror movies is worst
case situations.
Every previous Alien film has been in
some isolated, remote location. (Space Truck, Far Flung Colony, Prison Planet,
Research Space Station, and Antarctic Base)
The BIG CONCERN in each of those films has been how terrible it would be
if the Xenomorph infestation made it back to civilization.
Well…this time, they do! It brings the carnage right back home, to a
small suburban town in the Rockies. The
forest setting works for the jungle aspects of the Predator as well.
This second outing is a much better
blend of the two franchises, including the cast facing them. Soldier Kelly
O’Brien and her daughter Molly fit into the Ripley and Newt mold nicely. But the rest of the gang led by the Howard
brothers are more typical of the tough, but out of their element squads that
usually face the Predator.
Nice, “Get to the chopper” reference
as well, even without the accent.
Finally, the other true blending of
the franchises: the on screen introduction of the Predalien hybrid only seen in
comics and games before this. It’s also
an insight into how a queen develops a nest.
It is quite the nasty and gross
insight, but -once more- it is a horror movie, and bringing the Xenomorphs into
civilization was always supposed to be a worst case.
Another fun fact from the effect
team’s commentary. Although they acknowledge it is a queen, Tom and Alex dubbed
the Predalien “Chet.” The name is an
homage to the completely unlikeable character from Weird Science played by fan favorite actor of both franchises: Bill
Paxton.
Like the first of the cross over
movies, the unrated cut is a necessity.
Unlike that film, it has nothing to do with a small bit of extra
dialogue.
As long as the brightness is way up, the effects of these creatures are completely on display this time out.
As long as the brightness is way up, the effects of these creatures are completely on display this time out.
One example of a difference between the two versions, the glaive
related disk goes from sticking someone to the wall, partially off camera, to
completely bisecting them. Woo!
So turn up that brightness, and cheer
on your favorite space monster, because the battle is truly between them, while
the humans mostly fight to survive.
Click here for the return to Predator only movies
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