Resident Evil (2002)
First of the series of live action Resident Evil movies written, produced and, with some exceptions, directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. I've decided to go and watch all of them because... I don't know, I might as well, I guess. These movies aren't adaptations of the games and, as far as I'm aware, not in any way canon to them. I suppose the best way to describe them is as an "Alternate Universe" to them, borrowing from their mythology and setting to tell what's pretty much a standalone story. The Resident Evil game series is, of course, a sprawling mess that soft reboots itself about twice a decade, so "canon" is fairly shaky as it is, but those movies definitely are the work of a director who set out to do "his own thing" with the property. So, what is that thing?
Well, as far as the first movie is concerned, it's, more or less, an affectionate cover version of Cameron's Aliens that doubles down on that movies anti-corporate subtext while adding a generous helping of early 00's anime inspired "coolness". Resi 02 follows an amnesiac Alice, portrayed by Milla Jovovich, waking up in what I think is meant to be RE1's iconic Spencer Mansion. She does, however, not spend a lot of time there, having a unit of paramilitaries working for megacorp Umbrella taking her to the secret research facility called "The Hive" beneath Raccoon City.
The part about Resident Evil that appealed to Anderson seems to have been not that inspired by old fashioned Zombie horror and more the Cyberpunk influences dealing with shady megacorps, high tech bioweapon laboratories and human experimentation. Resi 02 is ambivalent, if not downright dismissive, of the series 70 horrors influences, skipping the gothic mansion to get straight to an underground cybergoth dungeoncrawl, even adding a murderous AI to the mix that ends up killing a whole lot more characters than the actual monsters do.
Let me get this straight, the Resident Evil series never meant particularly much to me, not in the way, for example, the Silent Hill series does. So let me put it like that: Resi 02 is definitely a worse adaptation of its source material than arguably either of the two Silent Hill movies were. It is, however, in my opinion also a considerably better movie than either. It's not, by any means, a great work but it gives off at least the impression of someone trying to make the source material their own. Resi 02 doesn't so much disregard its source material as its homing in on an aspect of it that, I assume, Anderson felt deserved to be fleshed out.
Much like its main influence Aliens, Resi 02 puts an unflappable female protagonist alongside a unit of experienced soldiers against an overwhelming horror caused by the irresponsible machinations of an evil corporation. Let me be straight, Resi 02 is not remotely the movie Aliens is, the short runtime and brisk pacing leave the unit of Umbrella goons accompanying Alice much less fleshed out than Aliens space marines were, the exception being female soldier Rain, played by Michelle Rodriguez. Neither is Milla Jovovich the actress Sigourney Weaver is or, for that matter, Alice the character Ellen Ripley is.
Nevertheless, I do have a degree of respect for what the movie is doing. The action movie crowd has, to some degree, started to reevaluate Anderson's directorial work in light of what has become a very stylistically homogenized environment. It is hard to deny the Anderson has a grasp on space and environment when staging his action setpieces that lends them a strong sense of scope, and that there is certainly a recognizable style to his usage of dark, claustrophobic spaces and labyrinthinge structures. While the writing itself never exactly excels, it does display a certain grasp on theme and a genuine interest in the Resident Evil universes more overlooked subtext.
By all means, it's not an exceptional movie but it did, at the very least, make me wonder where Anderson is going with this. Considering he wrote 6 and directed 4 of those movies, it's clear that he saw something worth exploring in the greater Resident Evil mythology and I'm interested in seeing what his take on the material is going to evolve into. And whether, by the end of it, I'll be able to see where the crowd looking at him as a misunderstood auteur are coming from.