Lost in a Roman wilderness
PAUL WS Anderson’s Resident
Evil: The Final Chapter begins on a suitably ominous note: Alice (Milla Jovovich) climbing out of a steaming underground exit, looking around, being chased by and charging a vast winged monster while driving a recalcitrant humvee. Welcome, Alice (the name’s hardly coincidental), out of the rabbit hole back not into reality but Wonderland. Things are a little different nowadays.
It’s been 15 years and six films so far, with a combined box office of close to a billion dollars, arguably the best video- game film adaptation ever. And the rare commercial success I might add that features a kick-ass female in the lead (with an ethnicand-gender-diverse set of allies, while the villains are mostly privileged white males).
The two phrases: “commercially successful” and “video game” help kill any critical appreciation of the series. I was a latecomer myself — didn’t much enjoy the first, skipped the second, hated the third ( directed by Russell Mulcahy of the Highlander movies, not a big fan), skipped the fourth, fell hard for
Resident Evil: Retribution. Still haven’t bothered playing any of the games.
Been following the two chief collaborators’ careers with interest in the meantime. Thought Jovovich gave a physically eloquent performance in the first and third film; thought she was fine in Michael Winterbottom’s
The Claim, as Peter Mullan’s brightly loyal Portuguese lover. Thought Anderson’s best work was and still is Soldier, his muchmaligned futuristic remake of
Shane, about an abandoned superwarrior who elects to defend a colony of crash survivors from encroaching troops ( his former comrades). Minimalist acting up there with Robert Bresson, I submit, and surprisingly poignant — the soldiers have been trained since birth to ignore pain, fear, anger, desire, their faces battle-hardened masks. Somehow it works; there’s a touch of melancholy to Kurt Russell’s performance as Sgt. Ted 3465, so busy being a soldier all his life that concepts like trust and tenderness seem beyond him ( he’s like an underdeveloped boy trapped in a man’s steroid-exploded body; sometimes glimpses of the longburied child shine through). All that wrapped up in a brutal wham- bam- thank-you- ma’am science-fiction action flick.
The arc of this franchise doesn’t continue in an upward trajectory, alas. Retribution was Anderson at his surreal best, with fight sequences set in luminescent white corridors (the better to show all the smeared blood) and shot in balletic slow motion, elegant dances that not only made sense visually but strategically, as Jovovich’s Alice not just outfights but outsmarts her adversaries. The film begins splendidly, with Alice floating in water; she suddenly arcs up out of the ocean towards imploding gasoline explosions and a helicopter assembling parts and windshield together from its pancaked wreckage — a giant battle sequence filmed backwards, a reprise and continuation in effect of the previous film’s closing. Alice is still thinking in The
Final Chapter — there’s a nice little fight atop a battle tank that recalls Mad Max: Fury
Road in its grimy postapocalyptic intensity ( only with more graceful moves), and a pip of a sequence involving our heroine hanging upside down and hopelessly surrounded by Umbrella troops. But the action has been chopped up, alas, the lovely choreography broken into little chunks. Anderson did this in
Pompeii in response to, I suspect, all the fights he staged in
Retribution; he must have felt he had to do everything not just better but different. He also said in an interview that he wanted to return to the feel of the first picture, move the emphasis from action to horror.
Nevertheless everything still holds together; you just have to watch them with a faster eye. Anderson’s obviously a fan of George Miller, who isn’t shy about using fast cutting sans slow- motion, and I suppose Miller’s recent film has inspired him considerably (Anderson still plays with film speed, just briefly and sparely; you can spot the sloweddown moments if you’re alert enough). The dances are still dances, just more challenging to watch ( think less Vincent Minnelli meets Tsui Hark and more Bob Fosse). Walter Hill went through a similar recent change, trading in his trademark lyricism for a more brutish but still recognizably coherent style ( I consider Hill’s latest incidentally to be the best Sylvester Stallone film ever made, and still think so).
Beyond the action there’s the plot, which includes a 48 hour deadline that gooses up the film’s pace considerably; you might say Anderson has traded in virtues like abstracted visual poetry for more old- fashioned values like a tightened script ( I also thought Pompeii was helped by the charming love story). Beyond that there’s this sense of finality: everything is darker, grimmer, filthier ( no spotless luminescent corridors here) suggesting everyone — Alice and Umbrella Corporation included — is nearly out of resources; yet they have this suicidal need to blow it all in one last effort, saving nothing heeding nothing, a not entirely unappropriate spirit considering the film’s title. It’s like the waterfall of flames that at one point punctuates the film: why save fuel, when you can blow it all in a literal blaze of glory?