PREDATOR: BADLANDS – “Turning a blood-thirsty franchise into a tender PG-13 action extravaganza with heart sounds crazy – but somehow, it works”
RATING
DIRECTOR
Directed by: Dan Trachtenberg
MAIN CAST
• Elle Fanning as Thia & Tessa
• Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi as Dek & Njohrr
• Mike Homik as Kwei
SYNOPSIS
It is ninth installment in the Predator franchise,
In the future on a remote planet, a young Predator, outcast from his clan, finds an unlikely ally in Thia and embarks on a treacherous journey in search of the ultimate adversary.
REVIEW SUMMARY
Turning a blood-thirsty franchise into a tender PG-13 action extravaganza with heart sounds crazy - but somehow, it works. Yep, Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator reboot takes a distinctly different path than its predecessors, swapping brutal R-rated carnage for a surprisingly soulful sci-fi adventure. It’s a gamble, to be sure - but one that pays off (mostly). Rather than rehashing the same jungle hunts, Trachtenberg and company choose to expand the Predator mythos in ways we’ve never seen before. Heck, we open on the Yautjas’ home planet where familial drama and cultural tension unfold before the story catapults to a deadly “death world” filled with a plethora of creative environmental threats. For once, there’s an emotional backbone beneath the armor. We get a clearer sense of what drives these creatures, and it’s oddly compelling (if not, human). Sure, some fans might balk at the idea of a “sensitive” Predator movie - one where the galaxy’s ultimate killing machine is actually the emotional underdog - but the execution earns it. Elle Fanning’s dual synth performance gives the film an unexpected emotional anchor, while the pulsating score and dazzling worldbuilding push the imagination factor through the roof. Yes, there’s an overreliance on CGI at times - and a handful of “Disney-fied” moments that feel overly cute (I counted about four eye-rolls). Still, the film’s pulse-pounding action sequences more than make up for the lack of R-rated bloodshed. Predator may have softened its claws some, but it hasn’t lost its bite. It’s not your father’s Predator - and that’s precisely what makes it so refreshing.
BOX OFFICE TOP 5
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Nuremberg
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