Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Your rating

Average rating

(4 votes)

Add your review

In order to be credited for your review and save all your ratings, please create a free account and log in. Premium membership is also available for just $12 a year, which removes all adverts, prioritises your submissions, and more.

9.5/10.It ends.Sad but it was necessary as Alice couldn't go anywhere else.I was glad they had Albert Wesker, Claire Redfield though I wish Rain Ocampo had made one more appearance.Hey I liked Michelle Rodriguez in these movies, she fit perfectly.Some said it was a messy finale I disagree.If anything I understood it, enjoyed immensely.Sure they did a sort of open ending, I chose to interpret it as Alice achieving peace.I would rank it high on my list of 20 Best Sequel Endings:1.Spider Man 2,2.Friday the 13th Part 6:Jason Lives,3.A Nightmare On Elm Street 2:Freddy's Revenge,4.Resident Evil:The Final Chapter,5.Godzilla 2:King Of The Monsters,6.Rocky 4,7.Insurgent,8.Beverly Hills Cop 2,9.Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2:Out Of The Shadows,10.Kung Fu Panda 2,11. Halloween 2 (1981),12.Dirty Harry:Magnum Force,13.Problem Child 2,14.Sharknado:The Final One,15.Bride Of Frankenstein,16. The Naked Gun 33 1/3:The Final Insult,17.Die Hard With A Vengeance,18.Star Trek 4:The Voyage Home,19.Shrek 2,20.Gremlins 2:The New Batch/Scream 2 (a tie here). Sequels often come with people's desire to continue the story the way you would with fairy tales.True some do it out of greed but I feel more people care about continuing with something that works well.They could try a spinoff or a reboot but it wouldn't work.It shall always be Milla Anderson, nee Jovovich, as Alice in a dystopian world.

Rob245

Continuity mistake: It was briefly stated in the second film that the T-Virus was created by Dr. Ashford to cure his daughter Angela and that the Red and White Queens were based on her. This movie contradicts that by suggesting that Dr. Marcus created the T-Virus to cure his daughter Alicia, and that the Red/White Queens were modeled after her. While the rest of the movie stays true to the continuity of the previous films, this rather obvious ret-con is still a major continuity gaff.

More mistakes in Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Alicia Marcus: I still own 50% of this company.
Dr. Isaacs: And what do you intend to do with that?
Alicia Marcus: You are co-owner of this corporation, but Wesker... Wesker is still an employee.
Wesker: I don't have to take your orders. My loyalties are with him.
Alicia Marcus: I know. Albert Wesker, you're fired.

More quotes from Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Trivia: The film was released in North America in January of 2017- nearly 15 years after the release of the original film, which came out in March of 2002. (Although the film was released in late 2016 in other select territories).

More trivia for Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Question: In Resident Evil Extinction, the White Queen says Alice's blood is the cure for the whole infection. So what the heck was everyone doing the whole time? Why act so surprised to find a cure, which by the way came out of nowhere, when you were the cure the entire time?

Taken250

Answer: In all honestly... this film series isn't one to shy away from ret-conning elements of prior films. ("Ret-con" being short for "retroactive continuity" - a storytelling device in which rules and plot-points are either changed or ignored in later installments.) This just seems to be another example of a ret-con. The idea that Alice was the "cure" all along would have ended the series a lot sooner, and they wanted to make more movies, so they just sort-of "ignored" this idea in the sequels that followed "Extinction."

TedStixon

More questions & answers from Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Join the mailing list

Separate from membership, this is to get updates about mistakes in recent releases. Addresses are not passed on to any third party, and are used solely for direct communication from this site. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Check out the mistake & trivia books, on Kindle and in paperback.