Released: 12th September 2018 (UK)
Length: 107 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Director: Shane Black
Starring: Boyd Holbrook, Olivia Munn, Trevante Rhodes, Jacob Tremblay, Sterling K. Brown, Keegan Michael-Key, Thomas Jane, Alfie Allen and Brian A. Prince
For all its iconic trappings, the Predator series has made steady
runs at the box office in its thirty-year history but has never been given a
truly worthy follow-up. Eight years on from the last Predator film and what do
we have? Easily the weakest entry in the entire mainline franchise.
Following on from Predator and Predator 2, The Predator
follows special forces sniper Quin McKenna (Boyd Holbrook). After escaping an
attack by the Predator in Mexico, Mckenna hurriedly sends the valuables from
the crash site to his home in Maryland. When his autistic son Rory (Jacob Tremblay)
activates Predator technology, a new hunt between Predators and humans begins
with multiple players seeking to take control of the situation; this includes a
shadowy sect of government researchers led by Will Traeger (Sterling K. Brown),
dedicated alien researcher Dr. Casey Bracket (Olivia Munn) and of course the
Predator himself, this time played by Brian A. Prince. The plot is all over the
place which may be down to reshoots, offering competent action scenes in
amongst a whole pile of unnecessary plot threads and filler dialogue. The film is
fast-moving and yet it still feels like too much was put into its runtime.
There’s a subplot involving Rory being bullied at school, but this is immediately
thrown out the window about a quarter of the way through. Rather than working
to flesh out the characters, Quinn’s team mostly just sit around and throw
crappy quips which rarely get a laugh when they’re not fighting the monster. By
contrast, the mystery of the Predators is absent for this outing, as the film
sees fit to reveal them in the most basic, straightforward way. The worst
offence committed by The Predator though is that there’s no suspense whatsoever;
the series has prided itself on using creeping tension as to when the creature
will strike next which has been executed to varying degrees of quality through
the years. Here, the film is pure action which really ruins any kind of scares
it could have had. When it comes down to it, The Predator is sloppy and muddled,
an amalgamation of tropes from Black’s previous films that should have been consolidated
and streamlined into a more coherent vision.
The characters in The Predator are a real let-down, ranging
from average to highly underdeveloped. Boyd Holbrook is merely ok as lead Quinn
Mckenna; there’s a light connection to family conveyed but he still pales in comparison
to his predecessors. Olivia Munn is serviceable despite her character being given
no backstory Young Rory isn’t badly acted by any means; what baffled me was why
he needed to be in a Predator film. The other characters, except for Trevante Rhodes’
Nebraska are drab and uninteresting; each one is a cheap gimmick and little
more. The audience learns little to nothing about them and so they sit below every
other team in the series. The same holds true for other side characters who are
either drafted in to fill a place or barely have anything to do; the most
notable instances of this are Sean Keyes (Jake Busey) who brings a flimsy link
to Predator 2 and Quinn’s wife Emily (Yvonne Strahovski) who essentially disappears
from the narrative after twenty minutes of screen time. The dialogue attempts
to capture the macho heaviness of the first film but often comes off as
cringe-worthy and while not quite veering into insufferable territory, there still
isn’t much to like.
At the very least, the film’s effects and action sequences do
hold up. The Predator is well shot and well helmed in terms of special effects.
There’s a solid amount of detail in the Predator technology, with some subtle
hints as to how the aliens have evolved and progressed their hunting techniques.
The action is always clear and easy to follow with plenty of wide shots framing
the narrative succinctly. There’s a higher use of CGI this time around and it
mostly holds up well though I was underwhelmed by the design of the Predator
dogs which when compared with those seen in 2010’s Predators, felt lazily put
together. It’s a suitably bloody film with Predator tools inflicting plenty of
nasty fatalities throughout. Other areas of the presentation feel half-baked
however; the music by Henry Jackman mostly makes use of remixes of Alan
Silvestri’s original score with not much in the way of new notes; at points the
tracks are also awkwardly placed, often marking the entrance of the human
antagonists rather than accompanying the action. The Predator is well-produced,
but you’ll find that some aspects do stick out in the presentation.
The Predator should have been a match made in heaven; Shane Black
knows the 1987 classic better than most and it’s a huge shame that he failed to
create a worthy sequel. This fourth Predator film is the worst of the franchise
and a very disappointing production all around. Someday they’ll find someone to
rejuvenate and breath new life into the alien monster but for now, fans will
have to keep on waiting.
Rating: 2/5 Stars (Disappointing)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.