Years after the Raccoon City disaster, Alice is on her own; aware that she has become a liability and could endanger those around her, she is struggling to survive and bring down the Umbrella Corporation led by the sinis...
Years after the Raccoon City disaster, Alice is on her own; aware that she has become a liability and could endanger those around her, she is struggling to survive and bring down the Umbrella Corporation led by the sinis...
The film's primary focus on post-apocalyptic survival and action, featuring a generic 'evil corporation' as the antagonist, prevents it from explicitly promoting any specific political ideology. Its themes are largely apolitical, centered on human endurance against a biological threat.
The movie features a visibly diverse cast with strong female leads and representation from various ethnic backgrounds in supporting roles. However, it does not engage in explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative maintains a neutral stance on traditional identities, with no explicit critique or central DEI themes, focusing instead on survival and the conflict with the antagonist corporation.
The film features Alice, who, despite having superhuman abilities, repeatedly engages in and wins close-quarters physical combat against multiple male security guards and a powerful male mutated opponent.
Resident Evil: Extinction does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The film's narrative is solely focused on the protagonist's fight for survival in a post-apocalyptic world, resulting in no discernible LGBTQ+ portrayal.
The film features characters original to the movie series and adaptations of game characters (Carlos Olivera, Claire Redfield, Albert Wesker) who retain their established genders. No canonical characters from the source material have their gender altered.
The film features characters like Claire Redfield and Albert Wesker, whose portrayals align with their established race in the Resident Evil video game series. Original characters created for the film series do not count as race swaps. No established character's race was altered.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources