BOTTOM
LINE: After 23
years, Hollywood has finally made a worthy sequel to the cult classic,
despite lacking some of the colour, character, thrills and mystery
of the original.
THE
GOOD:
From the outset it is clear that director Nimrod Antal knew exactly
what made the original Predator so good; wasting no time whatsoever,
the film opens with a dramatic free fall for character Royce (Adrien
Brody) as he regains consciousness while plummeting from the sky
and lands in a jungle courtesy of an attached parachute. He is joined
soon after by a band of other tough people who have been similarly
dropped in to this jungle. Before long, this group who distrust
each other come to recognise they are in the same situation, and
as they start to help each other, they realise that they are on
another planet and that something is hunting them. Going back to
the jungle setting was the right thing, but the idea of creating
an alien planet where the Predators deposit their game is a cool
take on the story. It allows for the kinds of situations that we
saw in the original film, but is free to explore some new territory.
The first attack sequence by Predator dogs is fascinating, as are
some of the hunting trap sequences. The film also does not take
the easy option of slamming in wall-to-wall action, but rather takes
its time to develop the characters and the situation. There are
some nice touches, including different variations of Predators,
a great Samurai-style fight and an intriguing final battle. The
subplots involving Laurence Fishburne and Topher Grace are quite
fresh for this story, and add a different slant to the proceedings.
Even the music score closely adheres to Alan Silvestri’s original
music. “Predators” is a worthy sequel to the cult classic;
monster-fighting fun wrapped inside a well executed high concept
plot.
THE
BAD:
Being a sequel, the film unfortunately has lost some of the flavour
of the original. Although the characters are quite good, they do
not have the colour that the cast of the original film had. The
amount of Predator action is also less than expected, particularly
in the first half, and given the film has a plural title, you would
be right to expect more; as a result, the film at times plays more
like a remake than a sequel. The thrills and sci-fi mystery are
diluted as well; the death scenes do not seem uniquely shocking
or scary, and the sci-fi mystery that created a sense of awe and
wonder in the first film is absent. It may just be that we have
already seen this scenario so it loses its effect.