![]() ![]() While we don’t know much about the circumstances surrounding why the real Wekser created the clones, we do learn from Bert that the clones were part of a research and development team to aid the original Wesker. As for Alby, he was killed alongside the original Wesker when Umbrella tried to shut down the project. We have been following Albert for most of the series, while we learn more about his eccentric and breadstick-loving clone brother Bert towards the end of the season. In fact, the original Wesker has three clones: Albert, Alby, and Bert. I became inspired, and visualized the theater doors slamming behind me.After a lot of questions about the topic, we finally learn exactly how Albert Wesker (Lance Reddick) – yes, the same Albert Wesker that died in a volcano in Resident Evil 5 – is alive and well in this show: He’s a clone. In their imagination, they're practicing. No wonder the steel doors make those slamming noises. In other words, after it shuts all of its doors, and gasses and drowns everybody, it waits 60 minutes and really shuts its doors-big time. ![]() The Hive is set to lock itself forever after 60 minutes have passed, so the characters are racing against time. If you live long enough you may find that happening frequently. Their dialogue consists of commands, explanations, exclamations and ejaculations. or Rain (I forget which): "It's coagulating!" Matt or Spence (I forget which): "That's not possible!" "Why not?!?" "Because blood doesn't do that until you're dead!" How does the blood on the floor know if you're dead? The answer to this question is so obvious I am surprised you would ask. Since the grid is inescapable, what were the earlier lasers about? Does the corridor have a sense of humor? Alice/Janus Prospero/Marsha Thompson and her colleagues are highly trained scientists, which leads to the following exchange when they stare at a pool of zombie blood on the floor.Īlice/J.P./M.T. Then the fourth laser turns into a grid that dices its victim into pieces the size of a Big Mac. A third laser pretends to be high but then switches to low, but the third character outsmarts it by jumping at the last minute. Another beam whizzes past at waist level, cutting the second in two while the others duck. Then a laser beam passes at head level, decapitating one. There is one neat effect when characters unwisely venture into a corridor and the door slams shut on them. They walk with the lurching shuffle of a drunk trying to skate through urped Slurpees to the men's room. What I don't understand is why zombies are so graceless. ![]() The zombies are like vampires, since when one bites you, it makes you a zombie. ![]() I hate it when that happens.) These zombies, like the "Dawn of the Dead" zombies, can be killed by shooting them, so there is a lot of zombie shooting, although not with the squishy green-goo effect of George Romero's 1978 film. (Eventually its tongue is nailed to the floor of a train car and it is dragged behind it on the third rail. Meanwhile, the monster with the 9-foot tongue is mutating. Three are killed, but Alice/Janus Prospero/Marsha Thompson, Rain Ocampo, Matt and Spence survive in order to be attacked for 60 minutes by the dead Hive employees, who have turned into zombies. Seven investigators go down to see what happened. We learn that the factory, code-named The Hive, is buried half a mile below the surface. When one of the coils is dropped, the factory automatically seals its exits and gasses and drowns everyone inside. The plot: Vials of something that looks like toy coils of plastic DNA models are being delicately manipulated behind thick shields in an airtight chamber by remote-controlled robot hands. Jones/Pa Hercules was portrayed by Ugh-Fudge Bwana in "Forbidden Zone" (1980). In pairing classical and literary references, the match of Alice and Janus Prospero is certainly the best name combo since Huckleberry P. Rodriguez plays "Rain Ocampo," no relation to the Phoenix family. I think some of those names came from the original video game. According to the Internet Movie Database, Jovovich plays "Alice/Janus Prospero/Marsha Thompson," although I don't believe anybody ever calls her anything. The movie does however have Milla Jovovich and Michelle Rodriguez. The movie is "Dawn of the Dead" crossed with John Carpenter's "Ghosts of Mars," with zombies not as ghoulish as the first and trains not as big as the second. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |