In the far-flung future of 1997, LA’s early 90s gang wars have taken on
apocalyptic dimensions, with a semi-militarized well-equipped police force
apparently unable to even win straight shoot-outs against half naked but at
least properly armed gang members. Perpetually enraged Lieutenant Mike Harrigan
(Danny Glover) is still trying, mind you, but really, his only ability as a
policeman seems to be shooting people really well, so it’s difficult to be
impressed by him, or his bunch of doomed side-kicks (including characters played
by Bill Paxton, Rubén Blades and Maria Conchita Alonso).
Things in Los Angeles don’t get better once a very rude alien (Kevin Peter
Hall) starts murdering gang members, police, and anyone else who isn’t pregnant.
Because this was made in 1990, a shady group of government male models under the
less catwalk-ready leadership of Gary Busey and Daniel Baldwin gets in on the
action too. Time for Harrigan to get even more angry.
Where John McTiernan’s Predator is one of the central masterpieces
of US action cinema with a brain, the second film as directed by Stephen Hopkins
is just a damn mess that squashes action movie clichés, violent conservative
wish fulfilment, and a terrible looking version of the titular creature into a
film that manages to be loud and obnoxious yet still pretty damn boring for most
of the time. Hopkins just doesn’t have a hand for flair and pacing, and while
his mass shoot-outs are competently shot, they never have the impact they
should. Which of course might have something to do with the fact that on paper,
the cast may be low budget action movie heaven, full of actors to put a smile on
every action movie lovers’ face, but in practice could be any group of guys and
one gal getting killed for our entertainment, for all the depth and interest
these one-note characters have. Somehow the film manages to make me not care
about characters played by Bill Paxton and Danny Glover, for Cthulhu’s sake!
Confusingly enough, the script with its pretty damn racist insistence on
comparing the black parts of an American city with a jungle in the worst
possible ways and gangs exclusively built on the worst stereotypes is by the
same guys who wrote the first film, who apparently haven’t understood what they
did there, nor how to use the alien monster they created well. But then,
the various attempts at more Predator films following all have demonstrated a
surprising inability to understand what works about the Predator and why. Though
they, at least, won’t have monster suits that look as crappy as this one here,
nor a director who is quite as inept at keeping it out of sight as Hopkins here
turns out to be. Though they all seem to agree with this film that what the
Predator really needs is to be less mysterious and dangerous, and more like a
space prick.
Glover’s Harrigan is a pretty sad excuse for a protagonist too. Sure, the
film is obviously trying to present him as a man broken by repeated attempts to
change the state of the city he is living in for the better, but it never
actually seems to understand itself that he’s failing because he’s the
proverbial guy who only has a hammer so everything looks like a nail to him, and
so can’t actually come up with another direction for him to go into than to stay
perpetually angry, shooting at somebody. Which a cleverer movie (say,
Predator) might have realized and used to say something profound (or at
least mildly clever), or something nihilistic, or perhaps even something
hopeful. Alas, Predator 2 only uses it as an excuse for another (and
then another) pointless shoot-out, but then doesn’t even have the ability to
make that shoot-out at least actually entertaining to watch.
Sunday, May 26, 2019
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