AVP - Alien Vs. Predator
Front Cover
Rating:
12.512.512.512.512.5
Medium:
DVD
Release Date:
1/25/2005
Theatrical Date:
8/13/2004
Date Imported:
7/11/2009
List Price:
$14.98
Genre:
Science Fiction / Action & Adventure
Studio:
20th Century Fox
Cast:
Lathan, Sanaa / Henriksen, Lance / Bova, Raoul / Bremner, Ewen / Salmon, Colin
Director:
Anderson, Paul W.S.
Audience Rating:
PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Aspect Ratio:
2.35:1
DVD Region:
1
Running Time:
101
Format:
Closed-captioned / Color / Dolby / DTS Surround Sound / Dubbed / DVD / Subtitled / Widescreen / NTSC
Language:
English (Original Language) / Italian (Original Language) / English (Subtitled) / Spanish (Subtitled) / English (Dubbed) / French (Dubbed) / Spanish (Dubbed)
EAN:
0024543157090
UPC:
024543157090
Tag:
Hollywood
Description:

Description "It may be our planet, but it’s their war!" The deadliest creatures from the scariest sci-fi movies ever made face off for the first time on film. The incredible adventure begins when the discovery of an ancient pyramid buried in Antarctica sends a team of scientists and adventurers to the frozen continent. There, they make an even more terrifying discovery: two alien races engaged in the ultimate battle. Whoever wins...we lose.

Amazon.com In delivering PG-13-rated excitement, Alien vs. Predator is an acceptably average science-fiction action thriller with some noteworthy highlights, even if it squanders its opportunity to intelligently combine two popular and R-rated franchises. Rabid fans can justifiably ask "Is that all there is?" after a decade of development hell and eager anticipation, but we're compensated by reasonably logical connections to the Alien legacy and the still-kicking Predator franchise (which hinted at AVP rivalry at the end of Predator 2); some cleverly claustrophobic sets, tense atmosphere and impressive digital effects; and a climactic AVP smackdown that's not half bad. This disposable junk should've been better, but nobody who's seen Mortal Kombat or Resident Evil should be surprised by writer-director Paul W.S. Anderson's lack of imagination. As a brisk, 90-minute exercise in generic thrills, however, Anderson's work is occasionally impressive... right up to his shameless opening for yet another sequel. --Jeff Shannon

Average Customer Rating:
3.0
Notes:
[7/11/2009] Flag changed to “Duplicate”