Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004) - 5/10
A ragtag group of survivors work to escape a city overrun with zombies.
Milla Jovovich returns as Alice, who following the events of the previous film awakens in Raccoon City, which has been infected with the T-Virus. Trying to escape the zombie infested city, Alice teams up with a group of survivors including police officer Jill Valentine (Sienna Guillory), a civilian (Mike Epps), a news reporter (Sandrine Holt), and a special forces agent (Oded Fehr). Unfortunately for the group, they're also being hunted by the Umbrella Corporation's B.O.W., "Nemesis"...
Resident Evil: Apocalypse was written by Paul W.S. Anderson, and directed by first time director Alexander Witt. Witt, a 2nd unit director on films like Speed (1994) and Gladiator (2000), took over for Anderson due to the latter's commitments to Alien vs. Predator (2004). Unlike the first film, Resident Evil: Apocalypse draws heavily from the video game series, specifically 1999's Resident Evil 3: Nemesis. How does it fare?
Ugh! The first 20 minutes of this movie are
Brutal. Why? Horrendous -
horrendous - editing. Have you seen Taken 2 (2012), with all of the crazy jump cuts? Apparently, Resident Evil: Apocalypse did it first. The entire film has bad editing and questionable direction, but the opening act is like a music video. If you have any type of sensory sensitivity issues, you
will get a headache.
Fortunately, act two calms down considerably and the movie settles in as mediocre popcorn entertainment. The thing Resident Evil: Apocalypse does best is probably lighting, with atmospheric visuals of zombies roaming the streets of Raccoon City. I commend it for a few shot-by-shot adaptations of video game sequences from Resident Evil 3: Nemesis, which were the highlight of the movie. The "Nemesis" character also looks amazing; the special effects team did a tremendous job.
Unfortunately, that's about all the movie gets right from the video game. In the Resident Evil video games, in my opinion no game invokes the feeling of hopelessness more than Resident Evil 3. By comparison, this film is extremely campy and action heavy, featuring big explosions and stunts. The "Nemesis" in this movie feels like a rip off of the Yautja from Predator (1987), refusing to attack unarmed people (why?). There a lot of weird Predator references actually, with thermal vision sequences and a word-for-word rip off of the "We're assets, expendable assets" line from the original Predator.
Regarding the plot, it's nothing special. The movie features a number of Resident Evil gaming characters (principally Carlos and Jill), but they take a back seat to Milla Jovovich's Alice, who spends most of her time doing backflips, using psychic powers(?), and driving motorcycles through church windows (yes, really). Alice is a coldhearted ass in this movie too, bearing little resemblance to how she was portrayed in 2002's Resident Evil. The rest of the characters are extremely shallow; the report is a reporter; the cop is a cop; etc. That's all the film thinks we need to know to care about these people. Spoiler alert, you don't; especially not when there are so many idiot plot moments. My favorite instance of this is when Jill Valentine sends one character to their doom by giving them a handgun they don't know how to use and having them explore a dangerous building.
Finally, I have to touch on the gore - or lack therefore of. Because of similar visuals, I couldn't help but think of 2005's Land of the Dead while watching Resident Evil: Apocalypse. Land of the Dead is extremely gory, and that movie has a carnage filled sequence where soldiers are overwhelmed by the living dead. There is a very similar sequence here, but we don't see a single bite, and it's all shot from medium distance. This movie is maybe slightly gorier than 2002's Resident Evil, but twice nothing is still nothing. I am confident the film could've earned a PG-13 rating with very minor edits.
Overall, Resident Evil: Apocalypse is a frustrating popcorn movie. I never thought I'd say this, but I think it could've been a lot better if Paul W.S. Anderson had directed it. I really wanted to give this movie a 4, but I must concede that despite my laundry list of criticisms, it's not
that horrible. It does add a lot of shine to the 2002 Resident Evil movie though; it's a lot better of a film than my 1 star gap indicates. Unfortunately, in 2004 I helped contribute to this film earning $129M against its $45M budget. If somehow read through this needlessly long review, thank you.