AVP: Alien vs. Predator (2004)

reviewed by
Ryan Ellis


Alien vs. Predator
reviewed by Ryan Ellis
August 17, 2004

My Tagline---Careful...it's rated PG-13 for "slime"

According to scuttlebutt, this crossover project has been in the works since

the dawn of time. I guess it took that long just to get the script up to the

level of cruddy absurdity. In any cae, the alien is finally making things

slimy & gooey for the invisible hunters. If you've been following the "AvP"

storyline in comics and video games, this movie might be a thing of

salivation-inducing proportions. What about those of us who enjoyed only 3

of the previous 6 'Alien' and 'Predator' movies and weren't jonesin' for a 1

on 1? Is there any reason for a non-fan to ante up bucks for 'Alien vs.

Predator'? No bloody way, Jose.

This flick takes place in the modern-day Antarctic wilderness (all the

better to isolate the characters and remind us of John Carpenter's

creepfest, 'The Thing'). Actors who will work for scale have travelled to

find an ancient pyramid buried under the ice. Little do they know that

Ripley's futuristic nemesis is down there, dying to lay some eggs and attach

some face-huggers on as many human hosts as possible. Also, the predators

have returned from a century-long outer space vacation to play a

shades-of-gray role in this fiasco. The human adventurers are caught in the

middle of an extraterrestrial battle...which might look and sound like fun,

but the whole project makes as much sense as Mush Mouth from "Fat Albert".

I dumbed the story down a bit there, but that's deliberate. It would help

you to shut your brain down if you go see this movie. I could barely follow

the story anyway, partly because I was busy aging a few years while waiting

for either the aliens or the predators to show up. For some reason,

writer/director Paul W.S. Anderson ('Resident Evil') thinks it's a good idea

to go 30 minutes before bringing the headliners into the mix. That means

we've got way too much time to spend with minimum-wage actors you've never

heard of before (except for Sanaa Lathan and Lance Henriksen, who get the

most screen time). Since a dozen producers and lots of special F/X had to be

paid for, there must not have been enough money left to sign bigger names.

It's not really the actors' fault, though. Brando, Newman, and Streep

couldn't do anything with this idiocy either.

Henriksen---who should form a singing group with Kris Kristofferson and Sam

Elliot called "The Rasps"---is Charles Bishop Weyland. You might remember

Bishop was the heroic android in 'Aliens'. Weyland is co-owner of the

company that wanted to use the alien as a military weapon in the original

series. [But isn't the 'Alien' story set in the the distant future while the

predator is a bad guy in our modern times? Head hurts...]. Anderson blows

this juicy opportunity to let us into Henriksen's head. Casual fans won't

even recognize the Weyland name anyway. This non-issue is one of the biggest

disappointments in the entire movie. When I heard ol' Bishop was in the

cast, I expected some back-story detail about Weyland's role in this entire

alien invasion. Instead, he's a rich guy hiking in the snow to be just

another target in the alien/predator grudge match. What a waste.

Anderson knows nothing about pacing. You have to wait a while for things to

happen in Ridley Scott's 'Alien' too, of course, but the characters are

interesting and you don't really know where the story is going in the first

place. There are no secrets worth waiting for in 'AvP', so the opening

sequences with nary a baddie in sight are just going to put you to sleep.

Forty-five minutes of dull-ass boredom doesn't offset about 45 minutes of

moderately entertaining action. Anderson's script takes the highlights of

the previous films and brings nothing new to this combo of 2 classic

creatures. As in 2003's horror crossover, 'Freddy vs. Jason', the climactic

battle IS nifty. If 'FvJ' was a dead teenager movie with too much teenager

and not enough dead, 'AvP' is the same thing...with adults.

The title characters themselves haven't changed much since their debuts in

1979 and 1987, respectively. The alien was made for the computer F/X age. We

get plenty of chances to see the warrior aliens (and, eventually, the

enormous queen) skitter around in full view. However, brief glimpses of the

shark in 'Jaws', Freddy Krueger, and the alien were always far more

terrifying than the extended look you got in the sequels. Your imagination

can fill in the scary blanks that no filmmaker can...certainly not the

below-average director at the helm of this sinking ship. At least Anderson

can't be accused of racism or sexism. His movie is very politically correct.

The white guys are quickly killed while the black chick gets to try on the

hero hat.

The first two 'Alien' movies were better than the only two 'Predator'

movies, but I always thought the predator was a cooler beast. He (well,

there's more than one of him...and maybe none of them are even a "him") is

the most sympathetic character in the picture. I doubt that you'll have much

sympathy for the people, though. Most audiences will wind up rooting for

BOTH bad guys, not for the human bait. While I can understand why mankind

would side with the dreadlocked preds over the slimy duct-lovers, the

predator's tweener role is too convenient.

Have I explained the plot sufficiently here? Probably not, but cut me some

slack. I was distracted by thoughts such as, "When will Darth Vader, John

McClane, Wolverine, and other 20th Century Fox icons show up?" Oh, cripes, I

just gave movie executives an idea. [NOTE: Movie execs + idea = never.]

'AvP's big box office take on opening weekend ensures they're already

planning 'AvP2', no matter what any wise-ass critic has to say. Hollywood

doesn't seem to care that they're ruining what we loved about the original

thrillers with these "versus" movies. One good perversion deserves another.

To shout this way, write to flickershows@hotmail.com

Hunt down my website at http://groups.msn.com/TheMovieFiend

==========
X-RAMR-ID: 38487
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1310973
X-RT-TitleID: 1134655
X-RT-AuthorID: 1446

The review above was posted to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due to ASCII to HTML conversion.

Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews