Like many Predator fans, the news that Robert Rodriguez was
making a sequel that the franchise deserved by taking inspiration from James
Cameron’s Aliens gave a lot of hope that Predator could more equally share the
pantheon of Sci-fi Monsters with the Alien. Aside from the 1987 Arnie original
the Predator series has remained a one off with the descent into the urban
jungle and lethal weapon territory in the completely misjudged sequel and then
the AVP films. Predator’s reputation really was only built on the solid
foundations of John McTiernan’s expertly done taut thriller which combined
equal parts suspense as action. The mistake in the sequel and the AVP films was
trying to take it out of its natural jungle habitat; after all in all the Alien
films the Alien is still confined to industrial interiors whether spaceships,
colonies or prisons. So this return to roots but upping of the ante with
multiple predators and an up and coming director under the effects guidance of
Robert Rodriguez should have given us the return to form. It didn’t really.
First of all the idea of a mismatched team of Earth’s most
dangerous men (and woman) forced to team together using their shared strengths
and weaknesses I felt was a good idea but the characters come off too much as
cardboard clichés. While in the first film there are also obvious cut-outs such
as Sonny Landham’s quite prophetic type or Jesse Ventura’s badass but they
often had real characters playing them who made them interesting than a boring
imitation and there were more developed characters alongside them such as
Carl
Weather’s company man struggling to keep the team composed in the face of an
invisible enemy. And while like most classic horrors and Sci-Fi films the film
takes it’s time creating the setup before introducing the predators it feels
quite dull and a significant lack of urgency.
The cinematography is pretty good but the whole production
lacks much originality from Alan Silvestre’s original score being pasted in
here the only real differences are the metallic birds, the predator hounds and
the different individual designs of the predators themselves. It dosen’t stand
out as sequel as more of a remake and worst of all unlike the hordes of aliens
in Cameron’s master class of a monster sequel here there are only four who
often attack their prey one on one while one of the four (who bears the classic
Stan Winston design from the first film) is tied upto a post the whole film and
actually helps our team of humans.
There is a faceoff between two predators and a duel between
a Yakuza hecnmen and a predator is an excellent sequence there are far too many
nods to the first film; such as the flying log trap or a Gatling gun or a
character staring blankly at a tree or a group firing aimlessly into the forest
and particularly in the unoriginal faceoff at the end which references the
original climax so much that it should give writing credit back to the original
creators of the series John and Jim Thomas. There are no classic lines as in
Cameron’s Aliens or the original; “If it bleeds we can kill it!”, “I ain’t got
time to bleed!” and “Get to the Chopper!”
Nimrod Antal gives the jungle an alien vibe and creates some
interesting shots but when the action kicks in, he resorts to the usual quick
cutting Bourne style where the camera often doesn’t capture the cool moves.
Some revolving shots aside and the duel scene he lacks any of the roving camera
angles Mc Tiernan had all over the first film. The final proof is that in the
comic book on the DVD I saw more cool shots than in the whole film including a
Predator wading through a river.
Verdict;
While on paper a
Robert Rodriguez produced, Aliens-esque sequel with a group of mismatched
killers may have sounded (good kind of like the Alien 3 setup) this fails
overall to be that memorable. The poor character development and blank faced
cast means that we are only watching for the predators who unfortunately are
also lacking any new tricks making this just another contemporary reboot that
can’t find the original talent that makes the original so engrossing.
Pros; Good set up,
Good Cinematography, Interesting Predator design
Cons; Predictable
outcome, Follows the original too closely and Poor Cast
Who’s to blame; Script
writer and Casting director
***
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