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Alien Vs. Predator: Requiem
Reviewed By Rich Drees
Did you ever wish for that one, really cool holiday present? The one
when you saw it in the store looked so amazing, the box on the
counter seeming to promise so much. And then, lo and behold, you
actually get the present! But once you’ve gotten it out from its
wrappings, you discover that with the exception of one or two
particularly neat bells and whistles, the gift itself is pretty much
a dud, not delivering on its promise at all.
Alien Vs.
Predator: Requiem is just like that present.
The film picks
up where the previous film left off. The sport hunting alien
Predators are leaving Earth, having defeated a brood of the mindless
killing machine Aliens. However, one of their group has been
infected by an Alien Facehugger, which means his chest will soon be
bursting forth with a new Alien- in this case a hybrid combining
aspects of both Alien and Predator. In the ensuing chaos, the
Predator ship crashes near an isolated Colorado town, unleashing the
Alien-Predator hybrid as well as numerous Alien Facehuggers, who
promptly latch on to some of the locals to perpetuate the Alien
lifecycle. Soon the town is overrun by Aliens, the Alien-Predator
and a new Predator dispatched from its Homeworld to cleanup any
trace of the Predator presence on Earth, with the townspeople caught
between.
Responding to
complaints from fans of both the Alien and Predator
films that the first, PG-13 rated match-up between the two creatures
didn’t carry the same punch as their separate R-rated franchises
did, the film’s producers promised a more visceral and
violence-filled sequel. While Alien Vs Predator: Requiem
definitely amps up the action quotient between the battling alien
creatures, the film makes the same mistake that the previous
Alien Vs. Predator did in not giving us interesting and
compelling human characters for us to root for , the way the best
entries in the two separate franchises did.
The townspeople
we meet are the stockest of characters. A teen from the wrong side
of the tracks longs for the rich girl he can’t have. Though she
likes him as a friend, her boyfriend is the violently jealous type.
His older brother is a just-released ex-con trying to get his life
back on track. And so on. There’s not a thing that makes any of the
people caught scrambling out of the way of the warring aliens that
make us care if they survive or not.
In addition to an upswing in the action, the filmmakers also try to
play to franchise fans in a couple of more subtle ways. One
character’s name implies a distant relation to a character from the
first Alien film. Predator fans finally get a glimpse of their alien
Homeworld. However, the film’s coda, which tries to retroactively
forge a link between the franchises, may leave audience members who
aren’t well versed in some of the Alien franchise’s trivia.
The first
Alien and Predator films worked so well because these
creatures were unfamiliar to the audience. However, in the
intervening years, audiences have come to know these creatures, so
suspense built on the unknown is not really possible here. So rather
than build up any kind of suspense level, the film just starts tense
and stays at that level, never evolving. Unfortunately, the effect
doesn’t so much as keep one on the edge of their seat but instead
tires one out before the film even reaches the halfway point of its
86 minute run time. |