I've been reflecting a bit more on my time with Prey, and some things stuck out to me (less than favorably).
First of all, Naru (I think that's the girl's name) spends most of the time in the background watching the Predator kill something or someone else. It never feels like in those moments she's at risk, because there's no real direct interaction between the two. I mean, I get it, we need to have scenes where she's aware of the Predator without the Predator actively fighting her, because at this point she'd get totally gutted if it did. But as is there's four times where she's just looking on from cover; Predator v.s. the bear, Predator v.s. her tribes men, Predator v.s. the french pelters, and Predator v.s... well, him just checking out an empty camp.
Other than this being kinda dull, it also takes precious time away from the cat and mouse game that's supposed to really test her skills against this thing. Instead we get a very rushed final confrontation which is just a straight up fight. It skips on the tension of the Predator trying to track her location while she's trying to evade/trick it. Similar to the third act in the first movie. Not that this movie should just copy that, but it was the best utilization of the Predator v.s. a human being. Honestly, the most tense sequence in this movie is when Naru gets stuck in the mud and needs to hook her rope and axe to a tree stump as she slowly sinks. And it has nothing to do with the Predator.
Speaking of the fight, there were a few moments that felt like Naru suddenly gained the strength of four men, like when she rips off one of the Pred's mandibles to stab it in the eye, and another moment where she pulls him over into the mud. Who knows, maybe those mandibles are just that easy to snap off, though I doubt that, but her pulling this behemoth over by herself? Nah, sorry. I can buy four dudes tripping it over by pulling the chain that's attached to the bear trap it has its foot stuck in, but not this young girl pulling it over with just a rope.
Also, I've seen people praising this movie's cinematography and I must say... REALLY?! I mean, I've seen worse looking movies, but this just felt like the same flat and textureless visuals as most blockbuster movies today. Granted I didn't find Dune very intriguing to look at neither, so maybe I'm just peculiar about cinematography. Or maybe I'm just very adverse to the digital sheen that's on most movies now.