Predator 2 Movie Review
Predator 2 Review
"Predator 2" Overview

Rating: R
1990
Cast and Crew
Director : Stephen HopkinsProducer : John Davis,Lawrence Gordon,Joel Silver
Screenwiter : Jim Thomas,John Thomas
Starring : Kevin Peter Hall,Danny Glover,Gary Busey,Rubén Blades,Maria Conchita Alonso,Bill Paxton,Robert Davi,Adam Baldwin,Kent McCord,Morton Downey Jr.
Every good monster movie deserves a sequel, and with few exceptions they get a
crappy one. Predator 2 is right in line with that legacy, a lackluster (and
Schwarzenegger-free) action flick that steals every page it can from the Aliens
playbook.
Since Predator took place in the jungle, Hollywood's sense of irony dictates
that the sequel should take place in the city: In this case, Los Angeles, where
a bloody gang war is underway. But the cops (notably renegade do-gooder Danny
Glover) can't quite reconcile the body count, and it isn't long until they
start to realize that another force is at work, which might explain the
metallic bits that no one can identify and the corpses missing all their vital
organs.
But from the one guy that wants to capture the Predator instead of kill it to
the assault team that goes after it and gets completely decimated, everything
about Predator 2 feels very familiar. Where's the little girl that needs to be
protected from the creature? (Well, it's sorta there in the form of an unborn
child.)
The bulk of the film is kind of nonsensical: Why the alien is here, why Glover
cares about stopping this gang war, and why the Predator doesn't just leave
when the going gets rough... these are questions that never get answered. And
you're not supposed to care, since the action doesn't stop, the weapons are
updated, and the gore is extreme (with the original cut earning an NC-17 due to
violence).
Predator 2's primary contribution to cinema is as a bridge between the first
film and Alien vs. Predator, thanks to the ingenious idea of putting an "alien"
skull in the Predator's trophy case on his ship. This launched a series of
video games and, 14 years later, the sequel that wrapped it all together.
Does this merit a double-DVD special edition of the film, complete with two
commentary tracks and behind-the-scenes featurettes galore? Fans of the series
certainly won't mind the bonus goodies, but casual viewers can stick with a
simple once-over of the film itself.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



