Ah, film novelization. Once the main foundation of the Chinese landscape, after the dawn of the domestic media, its function as a de facto-domestic version of the film was everything, but completed. However, the novelization persisted, especially when it comes to genres of films. Studies, producers, authors and the like were well acquainted with geys collection habits and knew that for them, possession of a movie romanticization was a fun pastime, especially when the Romanization took over creative freedoms with the story and the characters. What was formerly an unhappy by -product of authors receiving wounds drafts on the movie script and had to do what they had to fulfill their deadline, in fact, bonus content for fans who relaxed such things as if they had more time in the heads of their favorite characters and reading scenes.
In most cases, these decorations and additions were considered a non-Canon. However, in the case of The film series "Resident Evil" starred in Mila Jovovich as Alice, "Canon" was always a particularly loose term. The six films that make up Alice Saga, starting with "Resident Evil" in 2002, came to a surprise conclusion of the installment with "Resident Evil: The Resident Evil: The Resident" in 2016. Just because the film put a button on the story of Alice, does not mean that the series is particularly contained. On the contrary, because every film uples Clifancher, as well as teasing the next story where the following films rarely touch them. Instead of a franchise built around a narrow continuity, the attraction of The films "Resident Evil" directed (and/or produced and written by) Paul V. Anderson is that everything can happen.
Author Tim Wagoner apparently took that principle of heart when he wrote Romanization for "Resident Evil: The Last Chapter", " Because the novel carries a list of clothes with different elements of the plot from the finished film. Although it is possible for some of these to come from the previous draft of the script, or originate from scenes, but deleted from the film, the novel's ultimate stranger was more than likely that it was never intended for theaters.
Resident Evil and the unstoppable Albert Wesker
"The Last Chapter" has at least five previous characters and stories of previous films to try and round out, and they don't even consider the wealth of elements that movies could bring from the long -standing video game series. To say that the film obtained is a little messy and it is not satisfactory to bring everything that was introduced in previous installments is an underestimation, especially given that the big end of Clifancher of the previous film "Resident Evil: Retribution", strongly implies that the mass final is in the works. There may be any reasons for this mistake, starting with delays in drawing the film from land to scripts in the aforementioned loose continuity between the sequels that have already become established in any case. It is enough to say that Anderson makes a pretty impressive act of dancing with a tap when it comes to making the film feel like a decent conclusion even though it doesn't actually fulfill that promise.
Anderson's solution was to focus on Alice's main character and allow her bow to feel full and fulfilled, a decision that left most other characters in a confused state. The "Great Bad" of the films was initially assumed to be Albert Wesker (John Roberts), who appeared more and more in the films, starting with "Resident Evil: Extinction" in 2007. Based on the image of the games, Wesker was founded in films as the head of the wicked umbrella corporation, and with each appearance it was revealed that he had a new superpower or the ability to be infected with a version of the T-virus (the virus that turned the world into zombie). In essence, it is Alice's counterpoint, which is also insidious thanks to the T-virus in its system. However, in the "Last Chapter", Wesker (who seems to have shifted to the hero in "Revenge") was transferred to the chicken for the most prominent villain of the film, Dr. Alexander Isax (Iin Glen), last seen in "Extreme".
Perhaps this is why Wagoner has decided to make a promise to Wesker to return to the end of the Romanticization of the "Last Chapter", as his end in the film is everything for Isax's second sorcerer. In the film, Wesker initially revealed that he had betrayed Alice after the previous film, but then was essentially a digging, until he went to the Deadman's divorce, after he was fired from an umbrella and was convinced to destroy the company's last shelter, and the basket capacity). It is certainly a finale for the character, though confused and messy, especially since this seemingly unstoppable force decides only to give up completely.
Anyway, the last chapter, however?
In the novelization of the "Last Chapter", Wagner reveals that Wesker is not yet dead despite the performances, attracting his disrespectful and living nature with this malicious passage:
"Miles Beneath the Ruins of the Hive, Squeezed Into Almost Microscopic Fissures in the Rock, The Cells That Had Once Been Wesker's Blood Waited. Would Slumber in Stasis for Months, Years --even Centuries, if necessary --til the surface world was once more safe for them. They began to make the way up.
At first glance, this seems to be a wagon to record its shot on the sequel to the series, at least in the form of a book. It also seems that the author pays tribute to the Cliffhangers films always ending, or the trophy of horror film ending with the potential of the monster again appearing at some point in the future. However, although the passage initially looked strange, it is actually a wagon to remain faithful to the spirit (if not the letter) of the film he adapts. In the film, new human and disinfected Alice shows her head to a new adventure, as she admits that the antivirus will last for years to spread around the world, demanding that it continue the fight against deadly creations of the T-virus.
This is: "Resident Evil: The Last Chapter" is one of those "last chapters" only in the name, with the final leaves a wide bed for potential future installments. In a way, this is the series that pays its kind of respect for the tradition of horror film, because numerous sequels called "Final __" have been shown to be none of this kind ("Mission: Impossible", SeeEe see whether you are continuing this trend or not). While it is probability that another The movie "Resident Evil" led by Alice can happen is pretty low at the momentNever say never. And hey - who will say some Wesker's blood did not survive, as a wagener promised?
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