Resident evil retribution why rated r




















This is a prevalent theme in many science fiction and horror books and movies. It gets off to a bad start by showing the first action sequence twice, first backwards in slow motion to the beginning, then forwards.

This might have been easily fixed by running the forwards part in super-fast speed or in snippets, like speeding up an audio tape. All this perhaps would have been more interesting if the Red Queen was itself being controlled by another, more clever, human or superhuman villain. Finally, Alice never seems to be in real jeopardy until the end. The foul language is much more limited, reserved, and brief. Only a tiny portion of our readers give. Thank you.

Home Reviews Movies. None Light Moderate Heavy Language. Milla Jovovich Alice as Alice. Michelle Rodriguez Rain as Rain. Aryana Engineer Becky as Becky. Johann Urb Leon S. Kennedy as Leon S. Robin Kasyanov Sergei as Sergei. Ofilio Portillo Tony as Tony. Oded Fehr Todd as Todd …. Colin Salmon One as One. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Alice awakes at home with her daughter Becky and her husband. But soon she realizes that she is actually in an Umbrella Corporation's underground facility.

Out of the blue, the computer security system shuts-down and Alice flees to the central control room of the facility.

She meets Ada Wong, who works with Albert Wesker, and she learns that a five-man team has been sent by Wesker to rescue them. Evil goes global. Action Horror Sci-Fi Thriller. Rated R for sequences of strong violence throughout. Did you know Edit. Trivia While filming a fight scene with Milla Jovovich , a mishap occurred causing 16 actors to fall off a scaffolding and sent to the hospital.

A woman in a helicopter receives three IV lines at once and appears to have no serious injuries. Animated close-ups show injected viruses entering human bodies and swirling around with many barbed parts causing people receiving the injections to grimace, groan and convulse. Additional animations X-rays show teeth and jaws breaking in fights and hearts stopping when the chests are punched. A graphic of a large city turns red as if soaked in blood and then a graphic of Earth turns red.

Automatic gunfire and men shouting accompanies the opening credits. A woman teaches another woman to shoot for self-defense. Several times, a woman finds knives, guns and explosives to use to combat zombies. One man in a small group of humans standing on the roof of the White House says, "This is the last stand of humanity. This is the beginning of the end" as the scene blacks out.

Several men and women arrive at the White House to find it burning and smoking and the grass on the front lawn scorched and smoldering. Zombies have scary mutated tentacles shooting out of their mouths. Car crashes and explosions. No one is thinking about sex here, but in one scene, Alice wakes up and finds herself almost naked, wearing two white sheets that cover her back and front.

Nothing sensitive is shown, but at the same time, not much is left to the imagination. In one early scene, a husband and wife display affection for each other including a butt slap. A couple of scenes take place in a fake model of New York City. This contains a replica of Times Square, complete with billboards. Reebok, Levi's, and other brands are briefly visible. Like the others, this one has strong sci-fi violence and gore zombie and monster attacks , as well as guns and shooting and martial arts fighting.

Many zombies expire, some humans die, and some blood is shown. Note: Watching the movie in 3-D increases the intensity of the viewing experience. Add your rating See all 8 parent reviews.

Add your rating See all 19 kid reviews. As horror, this movie's not very spooky, except for a couple of typical jump-scares; and as sci-fi, it's not very brainy. Anderson once again returns to the helm of this series, as he did for the first and fourth entries. But while the last movie felt clean and more character-focused, this one seems a good deal lazier, both in the writing and directing departments.

For instance, Anderson comes up with a couple of potentially great martial arts fight scenes but edits them too quickly and lowers the emotional stakes. Though several characters band together here, the movie doesn't seem to care about any of them, and none of them gets much more than a couple of tough-guy line readings. They never develop any personalities. Indeed, when characters start dying, it's hard to remember who's gone.

The 3-D isn't used quite as well this time, either, and it often goes unnoticed. The visual effects are pretty much business as usual. Families can talk about Resident Evil: Retribution 's violence. How did it make you feel? Were you scared? Were you grossed out? Is Alice a strong female role model, or is she a stereotype? How do the Resident Evil movies compare to the video games they're based on? Which is more entertaining -- the interactive zombie-killing experience, or the passive one?

Do you feel the need to see the latest Resident Evil movie just because you've seen the others? How does the latest one compare?



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