Resident Evil: Extinction
Resident Evil: Extinction | |
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Directed by | Russell Mulcahy |
Written by | Paul W. S. Anderson |
Based on | Resident Evil by Capcom |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | David Johnson |
Edited by | Niven Howie |
Music by | Charlie Clouser |
Production companies | |
Distributed by |
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Release dates |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Countries | |
Language | English |
Budget | $45 million[4] |
Box office | $147.7 million[1][5] |
Resident Evil: Extinction is a 2007
In November 2005, Screen Gems gained the rights for the third installment in the franchise, which was then subtitled Extinction. Anderson returned as a writer, and filming took place in Mexico with Mulcahy as the director.
Resident Evil: Extinction was released in the United States on September 21, 2007, and was released in the United Kingdom on October 12, 2007, by
Plot
A cloned Alice wakes up in a mansion, wanders through its halls, and is forced to escape several
Five years after Umbrella's attempts to cover up the T-Virus contamination,[a] the T-virus has spread around the world, devastating not only the human population but the entire global environment. The real Alice wanders the wasteland, and after fighting off a family of marauders, discovers information in an abandoned notebook referring to an uninfected area in Alaska.
Simultaneously, a convoy of survivors led by
Isaacs' attempts to domesticate the infected lead to the creation of a new zombie breed. Wesker's security officer, Captain Alexander Slater, reports on Isaacs' disregard for Umbrella regulations. Wesker tasks Slater with watching Isaacs, telling him to kill the scientist if he disobeys orders again. Tracing an energy pattern sent out by Alice's telekinesis, Umbrella triangulates her location. Desperate to reclaim Alice for the sake of achieving his goals, Dr. Isaacs sends his new zombies to ambush the convoy against Wesker's specific orders. During the attack, most of the convoy is killed, and L.J. succumbs to his infection, biting Carlos before he kills him. Umbrella tries to shut Alice down remotely, but she breaks free from Umbrella's programming and continues to fight. She finds Isaacs at the scene, and he is bitten as he flees via helicopter. Alice and K-Mart use Isaacs' computer to track the helicopter's flight path, leading them to Umbrella's underground facility.
Approaching the scene, Alice meets a holograph of the
Later in Tokyo, Wesker informs his fellow Umbrella executives that the North American facility has been lost. Alice appears during the meeting, declaring that she and her "friends" (the other clones) are coming for him.
Cast
- security officer of Umbrella that has turned against them. After escaping from the Umbrella lab beneath Raccoon City in the events of the first film, Alice was captured by Umbrella, who wanted to use her blood to develop a cure for the T-virus, but she eventually escaped their custody and went on the run. As a result of her cells bonding with the virus on a genetic level, she was bestowed with superhuman abilities such as enhanced agility, speed, accelerated healing, and telekinesis.[6]
- Resident Evil - Code: Veronica, and Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles. In the film, she leads the convoy of survivors in Nevada alongside Carlos.[6]
- Oded Fehr as Carlos Oliveira: A former U.B.C.S. mercenary who has also turned rogue. He is a survivor of the Nemesis program as well as the destruction of Raccoon City. He is also one of Alice's closest allies and her love interest. Since the events of Resident Evil: Apocalypse, he has helped to lead Claire's convoy of survivors.[6]
- Iain Glen as Dr. Alexander Isaacs: The head scientist of Umbrella's North American facility. Dr. Isaacs was involved in the creation of the Nemesis program as well as the creation of Program Alice in Apocalypse. He is turned into the Tyrant monster as a result of a bite by a "super-zombie" and by injecting himself with an overdose of anti-virus. He is based on William Birkin from the video games.[6]
- Ashanti as Nurse Betty: A tough young woman who acts as the medical unit in Claire's convoy. She is a nurse, helping to aid members of the group to full recovery. Betty drives the paramedic vehicle and is a love interest of L.J.[6]
- Mike Epps as Lloyd Jefferson "L.J." Wade: A former citizen of Raccoon City who survived the Nemesis program and Raccoon City's destruction in the previous film. He also travels with Claire's convoy. He is Betty's love interest.[6]
- K-Mart store prior to the outbreak.[6]
- Jason O'Mara as Albert Wesker: Based on the video game character of the same name. In the film, he is the Chairman of Umbrella, and through holographic technology (due to him being in Tokyo), he has regular meetings with other prominent members of Umbrella, including Dr. Isaacs.[6]
- Christopher Egan as Mikey: A young but mature computer junkie who drives the "computer station" portion of the convoy. Mikey is responsible for monitoring the radio in search of other survivors as well as monitoring the motion sensor perimeter cameras.
- Red Queen. She is designed to protect and preserve human life and monitor the Umbrella facility, like her sister computer. However, the White Queen has more advanced holographic technology.
- Matthew Marsden as Alex Slater: Wesker's second-in-command after Dr. Isaacs.
- Linden Ashby as Chase: a cowboy and ex-cop survivor who is proficient with a rifle.
- Joe Hursley as Otto: a survivor who drives a school bus as part of the convoy.
Production
Pre-production
Resident Evil: Extinction was first discussed by Resident Evil franchise writer Paul W. S. Anderson after Resident Evil: Apocalypse opened at number one at the US
On November 7, 2005, Davis Film, Constantin Film and Screen Gems announced their distribution rights worldwide[11] with the film's title being changed from Resident Evil: Afterlife to Resident Evil: Extinction.[6] Impressed with Russell Mulcahy's work on Highlander, Highlander II: The Quickening, The Shadow and Ricochet, Anderson signed Mulcahy on as director, stating: "Russell pioneered a very distinct visual style, a lot of moving camera and crane work, lots of very fast cutting. He's got a very cool eye and sees great ways to shoot. His work certainly had a big influence on me as a filmmaker and that's why I was very excited to work with him on this movie."[6]
Casting
On June 12, 2005,
Story development
The film's story takes place in
Anderson stated that the film's story is original, and unfolds in a world that fans of the game recognize: "It's all part of trying to deliver a movie-going experience that satisfies the fans of the game but also provides a fun cinematic experience for a broader audience that has never played a
Numerous references to the video game series have been made, including zombies being unleashed through a T-virus mutation. While the concept of the undead remains the same, this film includes the "Super Undead". As Anderson explains, these are "a result of Umbrella experimenting with the Undead and attempting to give them back some of their reasoning power, some of their intelligence and a little of their humanity. Unfortunately, these experiments don't quite work and the side effect is the Super Undead, which are Undead that are faster, stronger and [a] more cunning foe."
Two main characters were added to the film's cast: Albert Wesker (portrayed by Jason O'Mara) and Claire Redfield (portrayed by Ali Larter) from Resident Evil 2.[6]
Horror magazine Fangoria featured the film in its August 2007 issue, and also on the cover of its September 2007 issue, talking with director Russell Mulcahy. The following details reported were inaccurate, possibly indicating to a change in the storyline:
- Alice's convoy are traveling across the Nevada desert trying to reach sanctuary in Alaska to meet Chris Redfield and other survivors. In the film, however, there is no mention of Chris, and the convoy is headed by Claire.
- The film would feature new "super zombies" that had been "pumped up on some sort of alter-essence steroids". The final "super zombies" are created using blood taken from clones of Alice.
- Mulcahy stated concerning the (what was then considered to be) ending of the film trilogy: "As far as I'm aware, this is indeed supposed to close the book."
- Resident Evil: Extinction takes place eight years after Resident Evil: Apocalypse. In the film, this was contradicted when characters stated that it had been five years since the outbreak.
- The character of Claire Redfield did not exist in the early draft scripts for the film, and previously Jill Valentine (who appeared in Resident Evil: Apocalypse played by Sienna Guillory) would continue the role in Resident Evil: Extinction. Later, producers Paul W. S. Anderson and Jeremy Bolt decided to have a separate game character appear alongside Alice, saying: "We thought, rather than bring Jill back, put her with another game heroine."[17][18]
Filming and post-production
Resident Evil: Extinction began
In late June 2006, Sony released the film's first two production stills, which included Alice wearing a costume designed by her fashion company Jovovich–Hawk,[6] as well as Claire Redfield.[23]
Marketing and release
The film's
The film's teaser poster was leaked onto the internet via a
On July 31, 2007, a full two months before the film's release, a novelization by
Resident Evil: Extinction was released on DVD,
Reception
Box office
Resident Evil: Extinction was the number one movie at the North American box office on its opening weekend, grossing $23 million in 2,828 theaters, averaging $8,372 per theater. As of January 1, 2008, the film had grossed $50,648,679 domestically, and $97 million internationally, for a worldwide total of $148.4 million.[1]
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 25% based on 101 reviews, with an average rating of 4.4/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Resident Evil: Extinction is more of the same; its few impressive action sequences unable to compensate for the pedestrian plot."[41] On Metacritic it has a score of 41 out of 100, based on reviews from twelve critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[42] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B− on scale of A to F.[43]
Steven Hyden of The Onion′s A.V. Club said that "the movie delivers some simple-minded thrills" and praised the "solidly effective killer-ravens sequence" but felt the film was too predictable, saying: "Anybody who has ever seen a zombie movie can figure out what happens next. Somebody will get bit without telling the others, which will inevitably backfire. Survivors will be forced to shoot suddenly undead friends in the head. One of them dastardly science folk will protect the monsters in order to study them, which will also inevitably backfire. And legions of undead will be re-killed in surprisingly easy fashion."[44]
Kevin Crust of
Frank Scheck says that as the film is "fast-paced and filled with brisk action sequences", it should "reasonably satisfy the devotees."[49] Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide gave the film a score of two and a half stars out of four, saying: "Equal parts Mad Max and Day of the Dead, [Extinction] is no less derivative than its predecessors but moves along at a brisk clip."[50] Pete Vonder Haar of Film Threat gave Extinction a score of three out of five, saying that the film had "rather lazy pacing", but added that "the way Anderson keeps upping the ante with regard to Alice's ultimate fate continues to amuse."[51]
A common complaint was the noticeable digital airbrushing on many close-up shots of Jovovich's face, which many reviewers found bizarre or unnecessary.[52][53][54] The film won the Golden Trailer Award for Best Action Poster and was nominated for Best TV Spot.[55]
Sequel
See also
Notes
- ^ as depicted in Resident Evil: Apocalypse.
References
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- ^ Leydon, Joe (September 21, 2007). "Resident Evil: Extinction". Variety. Archived from the original on December 23, 2017. Retrieved December 12, 2017.
- ^ "Resident Evil: Extinction (2007) - Financial Information". The Numbers. Archived from the original on May 14, 2021. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
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- ^ "'Resident Evil: Afterlife' Soaks Up the AFM- Refuses to Die!". bloodydisgusting.com. Winter 2005. Archived from the original on January 29, 2008. Retrieved December 20, 2007.
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External links
- Official website
- Resident Evil: Extinction at IMDb
- Extinction title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Resident Evil: Extinction at AllMovie
- Resident Evil: Extinction at the Internet Movie Firearms Database