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The inane ramblings presented here by Scott Foy
(aka The Foywonder) are strictly his own opinions
and do not necessarily reflect those of the rest of the Schlocktoberfest staff
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Starring Lorenzo Lamas, Priscilla Barnes, Corby Timbrook, Megan Molloy Directed by Jeff Leroy Alien 3000 is actually a sequel to a 1999 flick called Unseen Evil, which was apparently successful enough to warrant a sequel but not enough so to convince Lions Gate to release the sequel as Unseen Evil 2. Thus, Unseen Evil 2 becomes Alien 3000. I dont know how or why Lions Gate settled on the Alien 3000 title but I suspect it was because they actually watched the movie, realized it was almost as incoherently stupid as their Dracula 3000, and came up with the title from there. I can honestly sit here and say that I never fully understood much of anything in Alien 3000. The first half is all setup, but a lot of that setup seems built around information that is never adequately explained. Theres a mysterious cave that nobody can find up in the hills of an unnamed forest containing a priceless treasure of unexplained origin that is guarded by an alien creature for reasons unknown. If at any point in the film they ever said where the treasure came from, who it once belonged to, how it got into this cave, or why an alien creature guards it with a vengeance then I clearly missed that dialogue. The only real clue that this is a sequel is a brief dream/flashback sequence using footage from Unseen Evil had by the only surviving member of the first film, Kate, whos character is now played by a completely different actress than in the original. I suspect those like me that havent seen the first film and dont know that this movie was meant to be a sequel will be perplexed when they suddenly see Tim Thomerson and "Battlestar Galactica"s Richard Hatch doing cameos for all of five seconds. Speaking of cameos, Priscilla Barnes (Best known as Suzanne Somers replacements replacement on "Threes Company") and the incomparable Lorenzo Lamas are given top billing despite having a combined screen time of maybe 10 minutes. All their stuff feels like it was filmed as an afterthought and inserted after principal photography wrapped just to give the movie some recognizable names when it finally did get released. Otherwise, I really dont know why theyre in the movie. On the plus side, you do get to see both of them die brutal deaths, something I do believe is long overdue, particularly in Lamas' case. A government paranormal research group wants to spring Kate from the mental institution shes been residing in ever since surviving the events of the first film and being declared mentally insane for claiming an invisible monster was responsible. They agree to spring her but only if she agrees to help lead a ragtag group of misfit soldiers to the location of the cave. This Kate is a shrill banshee that constantly grated on my nerves with her endless screaming and repeated declarations that they need to leave the treasure in the cave. I so wanted her to die a horrible death but I knew that wouldnt happen because she was clearly the main character. This made me very sad. God, how I wanted her to shut up. I'm also not sure why they needed this Kate chick to lead them to the cave since its location is easily discovered by three different groups of people before the film is over. Meanwhile, Priscilla Barnes is the leader of this government paranormal group - at least I think its supposed to be the same group and she sends Lorenzo Lamas and the third runner-up in a Reb Brown look-a-like contest to also search for the cave or something along those lines. Again, Im not really sure what purpose the stuff involving these three is. They already have a specimen of the creature dead in the next room so...I dont know. More importantly, I dont care.
Back to Kate and the least convincing commando unit Ive ever seen; they hike through the woods until they come across the hidden cave that only Kate could lead them to despite it being a big, easy to see, out in the open, hole in the side of a mountain. Two of the misfit mercs plot to steal the treasure for themselves and actually conspire to kill off the rest of the unit to cover their tracks. Fortunately for them, the invisible monster begins doing their work for them, and its amazing how characters can be getting brutally slaughtered all around them and yet they still focus almost entirely on stealing the treasure. From there, things happen at random, stuff explodes, guns are fired, swords are swung, really cheap computer animation attack them, and a guy in a rubber monster suit kills them. And then theres the last scene of the movie that is perfectly fitting considering it doesnt make one iota of sense. If nothing else, at least Alien 3000 realizes its a really dumb monster movie and tries to be intentionally goofy. Problem is, its a lot easier to make an entertaining bad movie that wasnt meant to be than to make an intentionally bad movie. Alien 3000 just isnt very entertaining outside of a few sporadic moments here and there of mostly unintentional laughter, almost always involving the not so special effects. Heck, theres a helicopter crash in this film that would make Ed Woods eyes bug out. The only extra on the Alien 3000 DVD is a tongue-in-cheek interview with a guy in a suit with the mask and hands of the title creature now claiming to work in Lions Gates corporate offices. Its a perfect metaphor the film itself not nearly as amusing as it thinks it is. 1
1/2 STARS
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