[FILM REVIEW] RESIDENT EVIL: WELCOME TO RACCOON CITY Review (2021)

Summary: 
Set in 1998, this origin story explores the secrets of the mysterious Spencer Mansion and the ill-fated Raccoon City.

Year: 2021

Cinema Release Dates:  9th December 2021 (Australia), 3rd December 2021 (UK), 24th November 2021 (USA)

VOD Release Dates: TBA

Country: Germany, France, USA

Director: Johannes Roberts

Screenwriter: Johannes Roberts

Cast: Robbie Amell (Chris Redfield), Sammy Azero (Enrico Marini), Josh Cruddas (Ben Bertolucci), Nathan Dales (Vickers), Holly de Barros (Sherry Birkin), Lily Gao (Ada Wong), Daxton Gurjal (Young Chris), Tom Hopper (Albert Wesker), Avan Jogia (Leon Kennedy), Hannah John-Kamen (Jill Valentine), Donal Logue (Chief Irons), Neal MacDonough (William Birkin), Darren W. Marynuk (himself), Marina Mazepa (Lisa Trevor), Janet Porter (Annette Birkin), Lily Gail Reid (Young Claire), Chad Rook (Richard Aiken), Kaya Scodelario (Claire Redfield), Dylan Taylor (Kevin Dooley), Jenny Young (Waitress/Louise)

Running Time: 107 mins

Classification: MA15+ (Australia), 15 (UK), R (USA)

OUR RESIDENT EVIL: WELCOME TO RACOON CITY REVIEWS

David Griffiths’ Welcome To Racoon City Review:

Okay I will try not to fanboy too much with this review. Did I love the original Resident Evil film franchise? Yes I will agree I did, but even I realised that the franchise went on a little too long and yes it also had some weak films. But on the flipside the original and Resident Evil: Extinction were two of the best action films to ever be made.

Having said all of that though there was always a pretty big problem with the Resident Evil film franchise. While the films were good anyone who had ever played the games were very quick to point out that very few of the characters on the big screen were ever in the games.

That is why I have chosen to see the first film of the re-boot, Resident Evil: Welcome To Raccoon City, as something fresh rather than proof that this franchise is harder to kill then a Zombie Doberman. There is no Alice to be seen this time around and instead director/screenwriter Johanne Roberts (47 Metres Down) has decided to give the characters from the games a life on the big screen.

I found the story itself pretty basic. After escaping their clutches years earlier Claire Redfield (Kaya Scodelario – The Maze Runner) has discovered some pretty horrific information about the Umbrella Corporation. She returns to Raccoon City to warn her brother, local Police Officer Chris Redfield (Robbie Amell – The Tomorrow People), about what she has discovered… the town’s drinking water has become undrinkable.

However when she returns to the city she discovers that the effects have already started to show within the town’s human population and while she receives a cold reception from her brother soon the entire Police Force find themselves stretched to the limit when Umbrella’s warning system activates.

Throw into the mix an incompetent Police Chief, Irons (Donal Logue – Blade), who refuses to acknowledge what is happening and a rookie cop,  Leon (Avan Jogia – Shaft) and soon everything is going to hell.

I won’t lie I found the film enjoyable. It had enough action sequences to keep me from getting bored and I found the characters of Claire and Jill Valentine (Hannah John-Kamen – Ant-man And The Wasp) interesting enough to keep the story moving along. But the film has some serious problems that prevents it from becoming a great film.

First of all nothing happens here that we haven’t seen in the genre before. When the first Resident Evil movie came out it was fresh. Zombies hadn’t been a thing for awhile but of course now we’ve all just had ten years of The Walking Dead, a show I have to admit is pretty bloody perfect in the genre, and of course a myriad of smaller zombie films that have tried to capitalise on the zombie phenomenon.

The second issue is that for some reason Johanne Roberts has decided for some strange reason to make Raccoon City a town rather than a city. That causes problems because soon the believability of having a fort like Police Station and a special unit of Police Officers (with their own helicopter) stationed in Raccoon City becomes pretty unlikely. That then leads to the third issue – the special unit of Police Officers… why do all the male members seem so similar?

I know complaining about believability in a genre film like this seems a little strange, but that is where The Walking Dead works. Yes there are flesh-eating zombies but the world that they are in are believable, as an audience I can find myself relating to the situations that the characters are in… with this film I never found that at all.

If Roberts had wanted this to be a plausible film he needed to scale everything back, or make Raccoon City an actual city that would require a large Police Force, because as is this is a film that while serviceable offers nothing new to the genre. It has the feel of films like 30 Days of Night or Werewolves Within but not the originality to match them I would have to say that this is really a film that is just for true Resident Evil fans. Casual cinema goers are going to pick this film apart in a moment but at least if you love the games you are going to have the enjoyment of watching characters you love come to life.

Dave’s rating Out Of 5

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