The lovely Milla Jovovitch is back with a vengeance as amnesiac, genetically-altered zombie ass-kicker, Alice, in this sequel to the 2002 hit film, which is based on the video game. This time around the sinister Umbrella Corporation sends a team of investigators into their destroyed underground lab (the ground-zero of carnage in the previous film) and unwittingly unleash the still-staggering zombies and monsters out into the population of Raccoon City. Soon Umbrella has evacuated all of their own key employees and has shut everyone else inside to be devoured. A mastermind chemist's daughter gets left behind in the confusion, and she is the one ticket out for Alice and a handful of dwindling survivors, including the equally hot, skimpily dressed, and almost-as-tough lady cop, Jill Valentine (Sienna Guillory). There's some nifty motorcycle riding, plenty of bullets and splattering blood, and even a new monster--the hulking, heavily-armored, seriously ugly Nemesis. Comic actor Mike Epps is great as a pimped-out hustler who handles the whole dead-coming-back-to-life thing with cool nonchalance. In some ways, this nonstop creep show is even an improvement over the original, with a pervasive mood of nihilistic corporate dehumanization adding extra concern about the future of civilization to the mix of shooting, dying, punching, and munching.
DVD Features:
Note: This release is in the Universal Media Disc format for Sony PSP players only.
Widescreen - 1.78
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - English, French, Spanish, Italian
Subtitles - English, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian - Optional
Director of Photography
Christian Sebaldt: Director Of Photography/"Bloodfist Iv"
Director of Photography
Derek Rogers: DoP, CRIME SPREE
Executive Producer
Victor Hadida: Executive Producers, RESIDENT EVIL (2002)
Production Designer
Paul Denham Austerberry: Production Designer, RESIDENT EVIL: APOCALYPSE (2004)
Costume Designer
Mary E. McLeod: Costume Designer, RESIDENT EVIL: APOCALYPSE (2004)
Review 1:
"Mr. Anderson's screenplay provides a steady series of inventive action situations....It is, of course, all in the timing, and Mr. Witt's is extremely good. He knows just when to lay in a lull and just when to puncture it with a shock effect..."
Source: New York Times
p.E16 09/10/2004
Review 2:
"Witt injects the film with plenty of razzle-dazzle on the visual side..."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.E4 09/10/2004
Review 3:
"[The film] does deliver solid action/horror/superheroic scenes: the Hitchcock-on-steroids mutant crow attack is outstanding..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.71 11/01/2007