In
2010, Twenty years after the last Yautja only sequel, and three years after the
end of the Xenomorph crossover pair, a gang of the space borne hunters graced
the big screen.
If
I’d have paid attention and caught the fact that Robert Rodriguez was behind
this one, I would have been at that big screen to see it.
The
film is a mix of opposites.
Adrian
Brody’s Royce and Alice Braga’s Isabelle are built and act as more realistic
Special Forces members than the over the top squad from the original. Yet they and the others are playing humans
hijacked to an alien world via unknown means with a mix of other lifeforms to
be hunted by the Yautja and their dreadlocked hounds.
Sadly, stepping away from Ripley’s influence in the Alien Franchise puts Isabelle in the damsel in distress role a bit more often that should happen to an experienced sniper, though her unerring aim rescues a few of her co-stars.
Sadly, stepping away from Ripley’s influence in the Alien Franchise puts Isabelle in the damsel in distress role a bit more often that should happen to an experienced sniper, though her unerring aim rescues a few of her co-stars.
While
less overtly, “Ain’t got time to bleed” manly, this group is more
effective. None of the original Predator team took out a foe with their
last stands. Several do in this film,
including Hanzo (Louis Ozawa Changchien) who eclipses Billy’s “scream like a
leeetle gurl” performance by killing a Yautja using a Katana.
The
KNB “Evil Dead” effects guys took over for this one, returning to Predator
roots, and expanding with the hounds and the new clan. Derek Mears, Carey
Jones, and Brian Steele do admirably in their first turn as multiple
Yautja. The Berserker has a Xenomorph
jaw on its mask, for a last tenuous cling to hopes of the franchises combining
again.
Much
of the original Predator’s success
came from the slow reveal of the creature in layers throughout the story.
This
film tries to recapture that in reverse almost.
We
know what Yautja are and what they look like. Those of us who read the comics
know a bit about different clans as well.
The big guys had some cool reveal moments of their looks, technology and
pets but held close to classic designs.
Where
the slow reveal came from was twofold.
The
first was the nature of the “game preserve” planet that the humans had been
transported to.
More
importantly, however, was the humans themselves.
What
this film does is “drop in” a pile of amazingly strong and individualistic character
actors. The ones already mentioned are
joined by Danny Trejo, Mahershala Ali, Walton Goggins, Topher Grace and Oleg
Tartarov. Each player has some sort of
secret, Predator impressing past, which they guard from the other members of the
group they’re thrown together with. How each views group tactics versus self-preservation
slowly unfolds throughout their encounters with the Yautja trying to make
trophies out of them.
Laurence
Fishburne’s Noland adds the amount of depth and quality that he brings to any
role. At various times he appears to be an alien, a savior, an enemy, a looney
and an innocent. There are moments where
it seems like “Mr. Clean” was rescued and revived after being shot on the Nung
River and has been surviving against the Yautja since then.
I’ve
been using these to be full reminiscences, spoilers and all. This one is different, however, as with the
cast’s hidden backgrounds; it runs as a multi-tiered mystery all the way
through to the end.
Therefore
instead of talking about all those reveals, I’m just going to go watch it
again.
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