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Movie Reviews

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City

Constantin Film, 2021

To quote Resident Evil: Welcome To Raccoon City’s zombie dog: woof. This thing is bad. A reboot of the franchise known for its downright batshit stories and Milla Jovovich ass-kicking action, Welcome to Raccoon City seeks to position the story much more faithfully to the games themselves, attempting to adapt both the original 1998 classic and its follow-up and doing none of it particularly well. In fact writer-director Johannes Roberts’ film is so obsessed with referencing these games that it forgets to have any identity of its own, let alone a comprehensible story; a mishmash of poorly executed action, weak characters and a general sense of carelessness all around.

After a brief flashback bombards you with easter eggs and little else, we find ourselves introduced to Claire Redfield (Kaya Scodelario) on her way back into the ramshackle Raccoon City to warn estranged brother Chris (Robbie Amell) of a conspiracy involving sinister pharmaceutical company Umbrella. Irked by his sister’s sudden reappearance Chris heads off with his specialist police unit – Jill Valentine (Hannah John-Kamen), Albert Wesker (Tom Hopper) and Richard Aiken (Chad Rook) – to investigate a disturbance at the ominous Spencer Mansion, created by the founder of Umbrella. When residents of the city begin to zombify and violently attack one another Claire finds herself holed up at the Raccoon City police precinct with rookie Leon Kennedy (Avan Jogia), the pair forced to team up to uncover Umbrella’s plot before the city is unceremoniously wiped off the face of the earth in an effort to contain the spreading plague.

Constantin Film, 2021

If the Paul W.S. Anderson films were derided for their refusal to cohere to any sort of franchise lore, adapting whatever they felt like and cramming it into a jumble of mindless action, then Johannes’ film seeks to go the other route. Almost every scene feels like a sensory overload of easter eggs and scenes pulled directly from the game in an effort to have the viewer constantly yell at the screen “that’s Lisa Trevor!” or “that’s the truck crash from Resident Evil 2!”. Meanwhile the story itself is a mess of these incoherent scenes stitched together without any connective tissue, as if Roberts’ believes the appeal of the games are simply the cut-scenes and not the story uncovered through actually playing it. The player appreciates the cut-scenes because of the context they have been given by actually playing the game. Simply throwing everything and the kitchen sink at the screen in the hopes that it bears a resemblance to what the audience has already played is a surefire way to ensure they disengage from having any genuine investment in the story or characters.

Constantin Film, 2021

Admittedly you can see that Roberts’ is clearly a fan of the games, with a high attention to detail for recreating those iconic moments as accurately as possible. Where he stumbles hard is in that connective tissue. Welcome to Raccoon City is a downright dumb movie, riddled with inconsistencies and stupid plot conveniences. Take a moment early in the film, for instance. Claire is attempting to get into a house, trying the front and back doors before eventually picking the lock. The character whose house it is then has an extended exchange with Claire about how advanced the security systems are, but when Claire attempts to leave that place in a hurry she finds his motorcycle outside with the keys conveniently already in the ignition.

It’s a small gripe, but one that speaks to a larger problem. Where the security discussion was meant to establish Claire as a jack-of-all-trades and highlight her quick thinking, the following easy exit completely contradicts it and shows that everything going forward will be as convenient as it needs to be to move the story forward. In a similar way the film is timestamped in the hours leading up to 6am in an effort to ramp up the tension before the inevitable explosion… only in the intervals between timestamps Roberts’ forgets to check in with all his characters, meaning people have barely moved or done anything at all in the preceding hour.

Constantin Film, 2021

That being said there are a few positives to be found. Kaya Scoledario is rock solid as the tough-as-nails Claire. She gets easily the most character development to work with and whilst those flashbacks are poorly unraveled, the effect the trauma from Claire’s past has had on her is evident in her performance in small moments of hesitation. The action is largely forgettable, with Roberts’ preferring to show only quick flashes rather than true set-pieces, but there are some genuine moments of claustrophobic terror mined from close encounters in cramped corridors that harken back to that primal fear associated with playing the games.

While Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City isn’t the worst film the franchise has put out, it is certainly close to it: a dismal attempt to more faithfully adapt the games that neither succeeds in doing that or telling a compelling story. So much has been forgone in the pursuit of accuracy that the resulting film isn’t even all that much fun, a foundational pillar of the whacky Alice films. Thank you for the welcome Raccoon City, but I’d like to leave now and never come back.

Constantin Film, 2021

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City stars Kaya Scodelario, Robbie Amell, Hannah John-Kamen, Tom Hopper, Avan Jogia, Donal Logue, Chad Rook, Marina Mazepa & Neil McDonough – In cinemas now.

Rating: 3 out of 10.

3/10

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Movie Reviews

Code 8

Colony Pictures, 2019

Superhero movies are everywhere nowadays. Every year we seem to be inundated with big budget releases from Marvel and DC; well made action films of a generally high standard (Suicide Squad not withstanding) which make boatloads of cash for the studios, prompting dozens more to go into development with higher budgets and effects. Enter the rise of the low budget superhero film. We saw it last year with Brightburn; an interesting spin on a decades old origin story that didn’t quite hit like it should have and now we see it done with much more success in Jeff Chan’s Code 8. Set in a gritty world where powers are despised by society and those with them are hunted, the film is less standard superhero film than it is a sci-fi heist thriller with a lot of heart. Whilst it borrows some concepts from other films and the plot loses its place in spots, the endearing lead performances from cousins Robbie and Stephen Amell combined with solid action, terrific world building and a swift pace make this one enjoyable, easy watch that I would be happy to spend more time with.

Set in the futuristic Lincoln City, built by the same superpowered humans that are now under strict restrictions, we follow Connor Reed (Robbie Amell), a down on his luck handyman working odd jobs to make ends meet and to provide for his mother Mary (Kari Matchett). When his mother’s cancer worsens, Connor is forced to look into other means to earn money for her treatment, taking a job with Garrett (Stephen Amell) – a high level enforcer for drug kingpin Marcus Sutcliffe (Greg Bryk) – and his team. Connor learns to embrace his power here as an “Electric” – allowing him to manipulate and create electrical fields around himself – forming a bond with Garrett and putting his morality at risk as they engage in increasingly illegal jobs for larger and larger pay checks. When the screws begin to tighten around the crew however, Connor must reassess the life he has chosen and take control of his destiny in order to save his mother.

Colony Pictures, 2019

Sound like something you’ve seen before? Code 8‘s story is not exactly the most original, sticking pretty closely to the standard hero’s journey, with a few twists and turns thrown in to mixed results. What pulls you in as a viewer is the world building: think a cross between the gritty, grounded world of Chronicle and the heavily regulated, robot police force patrolled streets of District 9 or Chappie. There is clearly a lot of lore here that the film teases you with, providing few answers as to the origin of the powered humans or the drugs pulled from their spinal fluid that now fill the streets. Rather than rely on exposition heavy dialogue the film finds creative ways for the audience to experience the world, with a montage of construction workers using their powers to assemble a house of particular note. It might not sound like the best use of budget, especially when there isn’t much to begin with, but it is just one example of a subtle way to show the world and is just plain interesting to see from a street level view – this isn’t Thor swinging his hammer or Iron Man blasting bad guys, it’s a real-life portrayal of these powers in an everyday setting. Speaking of budget, the film does a lot with a little; making the powers less flashy but more deadly brings real life consequences to using them and as a result the characters tend to rely on more traditional weapons, using the powers for utility. Most of the budget goes to the robotic police force of “Guardians” and drones which carry them and they all look spectacular, as if they had been plucked from something with Marvel’s budget.

Beyond the flashy world building and powers is an engaging story that hits with some powerful emotional beats, centered on two key relationships between Connor and his mother and Garrett. The mother-son relationship is central to the overall story, acting as the incentive for all of Connor’s actions throughout the film and Robbie Amell and Kari Matchett do a great job selling this bond. Connor struggles with the weight of compromising his moral code to help her, and her insistence that he let her go and move on with his life and Amell captures this internal tug of war exceptionally well. We see real conflict in Connor as he learns to utilise the powers his mother has insisted he hides, knowing they are the only thing that can provide him with the means to save her in time. This conflict carries over to Connor’s relationship with Stephen Amell’s Garrett, a man with whom he is fundamentally, morally at odds with, but who allows him to embrace his abilities and ultimately use them for good, even if it means using them for nefarious purposes first. The older Amell has cultivated an image for himself as the boy scout superhero Oliver Queen on the popular DC series Arrow and is clearly relishing the chance to play a heel for a change. Whilst Garrett is more of an antihero than a fully fledged villain there is some darker material to work with here and Amell more than proves he has the chops, making the action look easy with his stunt-heavy background on television.

Colony Pictures, 2019

Outside of these two central relationships however, things are bit more rough around the edges, with side plots thrown in centered around a detective (Sung Kang) hot on the heels of Connor and Garrett and a woman (Kyla Kane) with the ability to heal people who has been indebted to Sutcliffe and forced to keep him alive. The police investigation story doesn’t really go anywhere and doesn’t get the screen time to do so, with an attempt to flesh out Sung Kang’s character coming too late in the piece to really do much to endear him to the viewer. Similarly Kyla Kane’s character isn’t really given anything to do outside occasionally healing Sutcliffe and hurling abuse at Connor, with Kane’s performance coming across as boring and wooden. Greg Bryk does what he can with the character of Sutcliffe, giving him something of an energy reminiscent of a Miami drug lord, but without any of the swagger or charisma needed to really pop on screen. Thankfully the action makes up for these poorer aspects, drawing the story away from these less developed areas with some tight, focused scenes of brutal violence, utilising the powers in some inventive ways outside of the usual close quarters hand-to-hand combat.

Code 8 is a surprisingly engaging and effective spin on the superhero genre told from a gritty, realistic world set somewhere in the future. While it might not be the most original or nuanced film ever made, it hits where it needs to; with inventive world building, intriguing powers, solid special effects and a pace that keeps you locked into the story. Outside of a few meandering side plots the film fires on all cylinders, hitting all the right emotional beats with great performances from Robbie and Stephen Amell. If you’re looking for a fun, interesting flick to keep your attention as you while away the time in isolation you couldn’t ask for much more than Code 8.

Colony Pictures, 2019

Code 8 stars Robbie Amell, Stephen Amell, Kari Matchett, Kyla Kane, Greg Bryk & Sung Kang – Streaming on Netflix now.