Resident Evil: Infinite Darknesscertainly has its moments.
When series hero Leon S. Kennedy faces off against a new breed of B.O.W. (that's RE-speak for Bio Organic Weapon) inside the bowels of a deep-diving U.S. submarine,The Erotic Adventures of Zorro you almost get a sense of what might have been. It's a tense sequence, and the closest this new Netflix series ever gets to really nailing fear-inducing horror.
But it's fleeting. We might wantto spend an entire episode, or even a full movie, watching how a zombie outbreak unfolds within the tight confines of a military vessel, but Infinite Darknesshas greater aspirations. It's a story about conspiracies and cover-ups. There's nothing that really expands the universe of Resident Evil beyond what fans know, but there's no doubt that those fans are the target audience.
Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness ends up feeling like a set of stitched-together video game cutscenes.
Set in 2006 between the events of Capcom's Resident Evil 4(2005) andResident Evil 5(2009) video games, Infinite Darknessfeels anachronistic right from the outset. Fans of the series absorbed these stories more than a decade ago, and this freshly conceived plotline jammed in right between the two — despite having very little to do with either one — makes for an awkward fit.
The plot revolves primarily around a conspiracy and subsequent cover-up, and the assembled powers-that-be behind those dark doings. But calling this a prequel isn't accurate. Infinite Darknessdoesn't set up any of the Resident Evil stories we've seen since the mid-aughts, nor does it enhance our understanding of the same.
That makes this series more of a standalone story, but it also falls short there as well. The series, from TMS Entertainment and Quebico, consists of four episodes that all clock in at less than a half-hour. Trim out the credit roll at the front and back of each episode and you're left with close to 90 minutes of material — a feature-length movie, basically.
There's nothing in the make-up of the four episodes that suggests this story needed such an approach. But the episodic delivery doesserve to mask some of the narrative shortcomings. There are leaps in both time and logic peppered all throughout Infinite Darkness, and the illusion of time passing between episodes muddies our sense of continuity.
Those flaws are still there, though. The patchwork set of episodes leaves gaping holes in the plotline, raising questions that never get answered. When Claire Redfield, another longtime hero of the series, discovers in the course of an investigation that one person in a military unit may still be alive, that person — who is shown in a snapshot — is never named or otherwise identified.
He's a plot point whose purpose becomes clear enough when Claire shows up at his door. But the circumstances of how she managed to find him are left entirely vague. We're also left to wonder what makes this one individual so special, compared to the rest of his unit.
That paucity of detail is a defining feature of Infinite Darkness. Forget about character development or emotional beats. Any moment where someone's talking is pure exposition. When the talking eventually stops, as it does at least once per episode, we move into an action sequence. That's how the show is paced, beginning to end.
It feels like a story that needed more time and more space to breathe. Leon and Claire are the ostensible stars, but Claire's B-plot is primarily filler material until the final episode, when her path converges with Leon's. And even then, she's disappointingly relegated to a damsel-in-distress kind of role.
SEE ALSO: 'Resident Evil Village' is the f*cked up fairytale of your dreamsPerhaps another three or four episodes would have given Infinite Darknessthe time it needed to flesh out what's here and deliver a story with feeling. The problem there is, nothing in the four episodes we have already suggests there was even a desire to do that. There isn't even a token effort to build these characters beyond the plot information they can provide and, in the case of Leon, Claire, and a handful of others, their links back to the larger series.
Resident Evil: Infinite Darknessends up feeling less like a serial story or even a movie cut into four equal parts, and more like a set of stitched-together video game cutscenes. It just doesn't work. Cutscenes in video games only paint half (or less) of the picture, and that's what we're left with here: a half-baked Resident Evil story that bets big on visceral moments but falls short on substance.
Resident Evil: Infinite Darknessis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Netflix
Twitter is overrun with Facebook and Instagram memesAn Interview with Calvin TomkinsTaylor Swift's 'Eras Tour' is coming to theaters: Here's how to get ticketsEverything you need to know about oral chlamydia When Facebook and Instagram go down, Downdetector's comments pop offGod, Satan, Waugh by Dan PiepenbringThe Morning News Roundup for October 24, 2014Taylor Swift's 'Eras Tour' is coming to theaters: Here's how to get ticketsAmidst the Disney and Spectrum dispute, customers lose access and patienceViral TikTok Buffalo cauliflower wings are pretty good, but not worth the workStaff Picks: Dimensions, Defacements, Darkness by The Paris ReviewHow to change your Twitter handle and display nameEric Fischl’s “Disturbing Innocence”Viral TikTok Buffalo cauliflower wings are pretty good, but not worth the workTwo Paintings About the Temptation of Saint HilarionThe Morning News Roundup for October 31, 2014God, Satan, Waugh by Dan PiepenbringWhen Facebook and Instagram go down, Downdetector's comments pop offEverything you need to know about oral chlamydia Grief and Adventure on the Path to the North Pole 'Sound of Music' actress Charmian Carr dead at 73 New York bombing suspect's family sued police for civil rights violations Clever repair shop sign understands your cracked phone screen struggles Samsung kicks off its Note7 recall program in the UK Interview: 2Dawn Games on its upcoming shooter 'Ravaged' and life as an indie studio Extremely chill celebrity Kristen Bell ate pizza at the Emmys Harry Potter's childhood home can now be yours — for a price Apple debuts cinematic iPhone 7, Apple Watch Series 2 commercials Global Fishing Watch lets you track 35,000 fishing boats in real time Leslie Jones had more fun than anyone else at the Emmys 'Give them back their childhood': Why education is crucial for refugee children 10 amenities missing from the real life listing for Harry Potter's home Facebook hires top ex Emmys 2016: The 'The People v. O.J. Simpson' stars in real, glam life Boy with Down syndrome scores touchdown as terminally ill mother watches How Black Lives Matter made the leap from social media to social action Model rocks up on a horse to fashion week like it's NBD Women are sharing their clothing sizes to make an important point about body diversity 'Veep' wins best comedy series at Emmys for second year in a row Learn how your business can empower women in tech our next #BizChats
2.0245s , 10131.625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Erotic Adventures of Zorro】,Exquisite Information Network