Years after the horrors of Raccoon City, Leon and Claire find themselves consumed by a dark conspiracy when a viral attack ravages the White House.
Years after the horrors of Raccoon City, Leon and Claire find themselves consumed by a dark conspiracy when a viral attack ravages the White House.
The film critiques corruption and abuse of power within government and military institutions, focusing on individual heroes exposing truth and stopping immediate threats, rather than promoting a specific left or right ideological framework for systemic change.
The movie features a cast with visible diversity in supporting roles, consistent with established character identities, without explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white lead roles. Its narrative centers on a bioterrorism plot, portraying traditional identities neutrally or positively without making DEI themes central to the story or explicitly critiquing traditional identities.
RESIDENT EVIL: Infinite Darkness does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The story centers on its established protagonists and a bioterrorism incident, with no narrative elements touching upon queer identity or experiences. Therefore, the net impact is N/A.
The show features female characters like Claire Redfield and Shen May who participate in action sequences. However, their victories against male adversaries are primarily achieved through the use of firearms or against non-human biological threats, not through direct physical combat or melee weapon engagements as defined.
The series features established characters Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield, both of whom retain their canonical genders from the Resident Evil video game franchise. All other significant characters are original to this series, thus precluding any gender swaps.
The main characters, Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield, maintain their established racial depictions from the Resident Evil video game series. New characters introduced in this series do not constitute race swaps.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources