BOTTOM
LINE:
A
superior attempt to recreate what was so good about the original
"Alien" and "Predator" films, but it's so
mean and nasty to the point of ruin, making the film completely
distasteful and unenjoyable.
THE GOOD:
One of the main problems with
the first AVP film was that it didn't fit well with the the standalone
'Alien' and 'Predator' films. Many of the rules established in
the respective universes of each franchise were broken when inconvenient
to the plot, the characters were just crap, the sub-plot pertaining
to the Predators creating ancient civilisations on Earth with
pyramids etc was contrived, but worst of all, there was only one
five minute sequence in the entire film that lived up to the title;
a sequence which actually brought you a giddy joy when you finally
saw these two titanic monsters battling it out. For this sequel,
we have new directors, and they have brought with them an evident
enthusiasm for the original franchises. AVPR is much closer in
tone and style to the first two Alien films and the first Predator
film. They've cleverly recreated environments on Earth which eerily
match the jungle environment from the first Predator film and
the tunnel/mechanical designs of the first two Alien films to
the point where in the first half of the film you actually believe
they finally got it right. The tone isn't silly like the first
AVP film and the characters are dealt with just well enough for
you not to laugh at them (as in AVP1). There are a lot of references
to the original films as well which in the first half of the film
are not misplaced. The action sequences are far more numerous
than the first AVP so the film finally lives up to its title.
And the film throws in a few interesting continuity plot points;
the first AVP laid half the foundation for the Weyland-Utanyi
Corporation and this film lays the second half of that foundation
at the end. Overall, the filmmakers have worked very hard to establish
a tone that represents a cross between the first two Alien films
and the first Predator film, a feat the first AVP film couldn't
do, and the other sequels to the respective franchises couldn't
do.
THE
BAD: This
film is mean, and not in a good way. One of the major problems with
the humans in this film is that they're civilians, and as such,
it's just not nice too see good people get disposed of so violently.
But it's not just that they get disposed of, it's the way it's done
that's very distasteful. A kid has to endure the horror of seeing
an alien embryo burst out of his father's chest before it happens
to him as well. A young seven year old girl (after seeing an Alien)
sees her father get ripped to shreds in front of her by the Alien
after she tried to convince him there was a monster outside. Pregnant
women get assaulted by the Alien Queen (who is this time half Predator
and has somehow managed to avoid the egg laying entirely and just
implants the embryos herself through people's mouths). We don't
need to see alien babies bursting out of the stomachs of pregnant
women, nor see them have those embryos implanted in them in such
detail. There's even a suggestion that the Queen wants to get in
to the baby nursery and implant all the babies as well. It's sick.
Wasn't this Alien Vs Predator? Where did all this other rubbish
come from? It's distasteful, unenjoyable, and ultimately kills the
film to the point where you'll actually find that the first AVP
film on the whole was more entertaining despite its many deep faults.
On another note, although the continual references to the original
films is welcome in the first half of the film, they continue to
mount throughout and they become silly, to the point where a line
quoted direct from "Aliens" at the end of the film is
not only perfunctory but just plain silly and laughable. At the
end of the day, it's a shame that this film is destroyed by these
issues because in every other respect, the film arguably lives up
to the history of both the "Alien" and "Predator"
franchises.
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