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===Box office===
===Box office===
The film grossed[[United States dollar|$]]23,036,273 on its opening weekend ([[September 10]]-[[September 12|12]] [[2004]]). The film gained $51,201,453 domestically and $129,394,835 worldwide.<ref name="boxofficemojo"/>
The film grossed [[United States dollar|$]]23,036,273 on its opening weekend ([[September 10]]-[[September 12|12]] [[2004]]). The film gained $51,201,453 domestically and $129,394,835 worldwide.<ref name="boxofficemojo"/>


The film's success has spawned one sequel, currently in production titled ''[[Resident Evil: Extinction|Extinction]]'', the official web-site of which claims it will be the last film in the series, although a fourth film was initially rumoured. The film has also received a weighted average<ref>http://www.imdb.com/ratings_explained</ref> rating of 5.7/10 on [[Internet Movie Database|IMDB]].<ref>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318627/ratings</ref>
The film's success has spawned one sequel, currently in production titled ''[[Resident Evil: Extinction|Extinction]]'', the official web-site of which claims it will be the last film in the series, although a fourth film was initially rumoured. The film has also received a weighted average<ref>http://www.imdb.com/ratings_explained</ref> rating of 5.7/10 on [[Internet Movie Database|IMDB]].<ref>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318627/ratings</ref>

Revision as of 08:57, 6 July 2007

Resident Evil: Apocalypse
Theatrical poster
Directed byAlexander Witt
Written byPaul Anderson
Produced byPaul Anderson
Jeremy Bolt
Don Carmody
StarringMilla Jovovich
Sienna Guillory
Oded Fehr
Mike Epps
Sandrine Holt
Thomas Kretschmann
Jared Harris
Iain Glen
CinematographyDerek Rogers
Christian Sebaldt
Edited byEddie Hamilton
Music byJeff Danna
Distributed bySony
Release dates
USA September 10,2004
United Kingdom October 8, 2004
Japan September 11, 2004
Australia October 21, 2004
Running time
94 min. / 98 min (Extended Cut)
CountryGermany / UK / France
LanguageEnglish
Budget$43,000,000

Resident Evil: Apocalypse is a 2004 action horror film, and sequel to the 2002 film Resident Evil. The film stars Milla Jovovich, Sienna Guillory, Oded Fehr and Mike Epps. The film was released in the United States on September 10, 2004 and in Japan on September 11, 2004.

The film was written by Paul W. S. Anderson and directed by Alexander Witt. Anderson could not direct the film due to his work on Alien vs. Predator, but was involved in the film's pre- and post-production phases. A third movie in the trilogy is currently in production, Resident Evil: Extinction, due to be released on September 21, 2007.

RE: A mainly borrows elements from Resident Evil 3: Nemesis, and Resident Evil Code: Veronica.

Tagline:

  • My name is Alice, and I remember everything.

Plot summary

On September 29, 2002, exactly thirteen hours after the T-Virus outbreak in The Hive, which had occurred that same day, the Umbrella Corporation sends in a research team to re-open the complex. The team enters The Hive through a secret insertion point beneath Raccoon City. Shortly after entering the research facility, the entire team is then slaughtered by the T-Virus zombies that had been sealed within the complex. With the entrance now open, Umbrella realizes, that before long, these highly infectious zombies will make their way to the surface and begin a full-scale outbreak on Raccoon City.

Some four hours later, much of Raccoon City lies in devastation after the outbreak. Umbrella set a huge gate around the city to keep the zombies in the quarantine area. As civilians reached the local checkpoints around the city, Umbrella executives checked them for infection. Once the virus reached the gate, Major Timothy Cain (Thomas Kretschmann), Umbrella's security general, ordered all checkpoints closed for good, leaving no exceptions. All civilians must return to the city despite the odds, or Umbrella will shoot them on the spot.

Meanwhile, Alice (Milla Jovovich) wakes up in a hospital in downtown, dazed. After surviving incident in The Hive, Alice was taken by Umbrella and used for experimentation. She was injected with T-virus, and now had become superhuman, with strength and dexterity. She exits the hospital and finds the streets in devastation. She finds transportation and heads towards a weapons surplus store.

Elsewhere, Carlos Oliveira (Oded Fehr) and two other Umbrella soldiers link up with multiple S.T.A.R.S. units and attempt to hold against an onslaught of zombies in the street. There are too many zombies to handle and they are eventually over run. Carlos and his team fall back, seeking evacuation but realize they have been betrayed by Umbrella, left for dead in the infested city.

Jill Valentine (Sienna Guillory) (a Raccoon S.T.A.R.S. unit) and her friends fall to the Church, where they are attacked by Lickers, but saved by Alice, who was passing by. They join together and try to escape the city.

Umbrella immediately sends their latest project, Nemesis, formerly Matt Addison, to kill all S.T.A.R.S. operatives. He encounters with L.J. (Mike Epps), a cab driver, and 13 other cops. He kills every police officer, but spares L.J., because his directives were to kill the S.T.A.R.S., not civilians, not to mention his threat level readout placed the cab driver as zero threat.

Charles Ashford, a key Umbrella scientist and creator of the T-virus, taps into Raccoon local cameras, and begins to look for his lost daughter, Angela. He finds Alice and asks her gang to look in her school, in exchange for a ride out. Soon, Carlos and the remains of his men are contacted and agree, heading toward the Junior School. They save Angela & team up with Alice and her gang, as Charles instructs them to the extraction point.

As they drive, Alice explains the first movie, and Ashford states their escape vehicle is a high-jacked Umbrella Chopper. When they arrive, Major Cain captures them, executing Dr. Ashford and commanding Alice to face off against Nemesis. Alice wins, and Nemesis remembers who he is and starts attacking Umbrella troops and freeing Alice. He destroys an Umbrella helicopter, and pushes Alice out of the way as it crashes downward, crushing and killing him. The group then leaves Cain mortally injured by escaping via helicopter, and leaving him to be eaten by the zombies. Then, shortly before dawn, on September 30, 2002, a thermonuclear warhead is launched and strikes the Raccoon City Hall destroying Raccoon City completely.

The chopper is hit by the shock wave, and thrashed into the Arklay Mountains. Inside Alice is impaled as she saves Angie from a loose part of the chopper. The others escape, and Umbrella arrives to take Alice to the Arklay Research Center. 3 weeks later, Alice is reborn using a new strain of the T-Virus, giving her new powers. She kills all the guards and escapes, as Valentine & Oliveira pick her up, to begin their hunt for Umbrella. The movie ends with Alice's eyes suddenly resembling the Umbrella logo. Umbrella begins the mysterious Alice Project, unbeknownst to Alice's compatriots.


Cast

Actor/Actress Role
Milla Jovovich Alice
Sienna Guillory Jill Valentine
Oded Fehr Carlos Oliveria
Thomas Kretschmann Major Timothy Cain
Jared Harris Dr. Charles Ashford
Sandrine Holt Terri Morales
Sophie Vavasseur Angela Ashford
Mike Epps L.J.
Iain Glen Dr. Sam Isaacs
Matthew G. Taylor The Nemesis

Production

File:Resident evil city hall.jpg
Filming at Toronto City Hall.

Apocalypse was greenlit in 2002 when the first Resident Evil film was a success at the box office. The film was produced by Constantin Film, Davis Film and Impact Pictures, mostly on location in Canada. The film entered pre-production stages in mid 2003 and began principal photography on August 6, 2003 and ended on October 23, 2003.

The majority of the movie was filmed in Ontario, Canada; with Toronto and its surrounding suburbs being a stand-in for Racoon City. Toronto City Hall and Exhibition Place (namely the National Trade Centre) were used as Umbrella's worldwide headquarters, while the logos of Canada's largest banks feature prominently in the skyline shots of the city, and the Prince Edward Viaduct is used to represent the only exit out of Racoon City.

The movie cost $11 million more than the original Resident Evil

Paul W.S. Anderson, who wrote and directed the first Resident Evil, only wrote the screenplay for Apocalypse, passing the director's chair to Alexander Witt so he could direct Alien vs. Predator.

The Monsters

Previous to filming, just as in the first movie, actors playing zombies were trained at a zombie "boot camp." Actors were coached to act as zen-zombies (a creature that relentlessly follows its target) and liquid zombies. Anderson and other crew members were tempted to make the zombies move faster but decided that it would be breaking with a fundamental element of the games.

Nemesis was an actor in a suit, Matthew G. Taylor, with only special-effects applied to certain parts of the characters body (such as the eye of the creature). Despite Taylor being 1.98 metres (approx. 6 feet, 6 inches) in height he was still considered too short, to hide this the character wears large boots and in many scenes the Nemesis was stretched to appear taller.

The same dog-team was used for the zombie-dogs as in the first. The look of the dogs was achieved through a combination of make-up and computer-effects. Due to the dogs' inexplicable reluctance to dive through a sugar-glass window as they had done before, the window in the scene was done in CGI.

The Lickers were fully computer-generated this time, though the use of physical puppets was considered for a while. To avert the problems faced during the production of the first film, the CGI work of the lickers began early in production.

Filming Locations

Regenerate

File:Resident2 02.jpg
Regenerate.

The Regenerate "commercial" was a teaser trailer for the second Resident Evil movie, and can be seen in the movie on a TV screen in the female scientist's house. It is reminiscent of the Olay product Regenerist advertisements.

Regenerate (2003) is a skin care product (and registered trademark) of the Umbrella Corporation (motto: Our business is life itself), using the T-Virus to reanimate dead cells and make you more youthful looking.

An ad similar to the Regenerate can be seen in ending credits. The ad states that the film is "a product of the Umbrella Corporation." It ends with "Some Side Effects may occur."

The teaser trailer is available from Sony Pictures in both RealMedia[1] and Windows Media formats.[2]

Reactions

Template:Infobox movie certificates Apocalypse received even more negative reactions from the critics than the first film. The film appears only 20% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes (22 out of 112 reviews are counted fresh).[3] Tim Cogshell from the Box Office Magazine stated that Apocalypse is "superior to the original film." Robert Dominguez, from New York Daily News stated that the film "should please the target audience." Walter Chaw from Film Freak Central states that Apocalypse is "An awful sequel to an awful film."

Film critic Victoria Alexander (from FilmsInReview.com) said “If you like tough chicks killing zombies, RE:A is for you,” although she nonetheless noted that “Screenwriter Paul W.S. Anderson doesn’t bog down the film with philosophical subtext or explain the zombies,” which she acknowledges are probably not “questions ...suitable for the demographics targeted.”[3]

Critic Sean Axmaker gave the film a grade of C+, and said that the director’s “ headlong pace that favors action over spectacle... helps distract from all but the most contrived and absurd turns of Anderson's slapdash script.” Critic Dragan Antulovbigger gave the film 5/10. He noted the more spectacular setting (made possible by the bigger budget than the initial film), “deadlier weapons...[an] increased number of explosions[, and an] increased body count.” He said that despite the “shallowness of the content” there was “interesting production design and energetic direction.”[3]

Reviewer Roger Ebert gave the film one half of a star, calling it an “utterly meaningless waste of time”, “a dead zone, a film without interest, wit, imagination or even entertaining violence and special effects.” Chris Alexander of Rue Morgue Magazine said that “RE2 is a dreary, incoherent mess of a movie, failing on almost every conceivable level and having the dubious distinction of rendering hordes of shambling, screaming cannibalistic zombies boring.” Alexander stated that the director “Witt can’t stage an action sequence,” said that the lead actress “looks bored,” called the score “useless” and said that the “effects are more like defects.”[3]

Film critic Rob Blackwelder called "Resident Evil: Apocalypse" “inept, unoriginal, [and] asinine”, and stated that it is “on the Worst of 2004 list.” Blackwelder criticized the film as a a “braindead disaster” with “pathetic... leaden mindlessness,” with “impossibly stupid and nonsensical plot defects.” He stated that the film was “overflowing with off-the-shelf action-hack staples” and “tiresome stereotypes,” and directed with a lack of “narrative or cinematic sense.”[3]

Walter Chaw of Film Freak Central, who gave the film half a star out of four, criticized the “shoddiness of the make-up” and the lack of “critical biographical/geographical details.” He states that the editing seems like it was “edited with a weed whacker.” Chaw notes that “an entire sequence” was “lifted whole from La Femme Nikita.” While Chaw admits to loving genre films, he states that films like this “lowe[r] the conversation even lower than it already is.” In all, Chaw says “no artistry[–] it ain't good.” Reviewer Anthony Del Valle calls the film “yawn of the dead,” and laments “how little the writer develops the idea, and how the director turns his back on every opportunity to creatively exploit the situation.[3]


Box office

The film grossed $23,036,273 on its opening weekend (September 10-12 2004). The film gained $51,201,453 domestically and $129,394,835 worldwide.[4]

The film's success has spawned one sequel, currently in production titled Extinction, the official web-site of which claims it will be the last film in the series, although a fourth film was initially rumoured. The film has also received a weighted average[5] rating of 5.7/10 on IMDB.[6]

Trivia

  • The film's director Alexander Witt has a cameo in the film as the sniper on top of Raccoon City Hall.
  • Ben Moody, former lead guitarist of the alternative rock band Evanescence, makes a brief cameo appearance as a zombie in the film, which is mentioned in the DVD audio commentary.
  • The word "zombie" is never mentioned, following the example of the first movie.
  • Dr. Charles Ashford and his daughter Angela share the same last names as the Ashfords, one of the families who were revealed as having founded Umbrella and the last two scions of which were the primary antagonists in Resident Evil: Code Veronica.
  • Major Cain was attacked by the zombie of Dr. Ashford, yet he had killed Dr. Ashford before hand with a shot to the stomach
  • The S.T.A.R.S team that was killed in the store by Nemesis is said to be of the director's family.
  • The way Raccoon City was destroyed is similar to the way Jackson City is destroyed in Return of the Living Dead

Game connections

File:Arklaymountainsfromapocalypse.jpg
The Arklay Mountains overlooking Raccoon City.

Introduction Scenes

  • Apocalypse re-enacts certain scenes from the games (particularly the intro scenes):
  • The car crash scene that leaves Angela Ashford stuck in Raccoon City is reminiscent to the intro of Resident Evil 2 , which forces Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield to separate on their way to the police station.
  • The scene where Alice runs through the building with an Umbrella helicopter firing at her, up to the point where she drops her gun, falls, re-grabs it and fires, is reminiscent to the intro scene of Resident Evil Code: Veronica in which Claire Redfield does the same thing.
  • The scene in which Raccoon City is being overrun by zombies, and the police and Umbrella mercenaries are fighting back, up to the point in which a zombie reflects off a fallen police helmet, is reminiscent to the intro scene of Resident Evil 3: Nemesis. The launching of the missile to complete sanitation is also a scene similar to that of one in the game.

Resident Evil

  • The crash site of the helicopter is located in the Arklay Forest near the Arklay Mountains, where the Resident Evil series first began.
  • In the abandoned church and school, Jill moves and points the gun the exact same way she does in the game.
  • Terri's death is similar to Joseph's death (RE1 remake) which is also recorded, though the latter was mauled by the zombie dogs, not children.
  • A white goddess statue can be seen in the church. Artwork of goddesses has a large role within the puzzles in the Resident Evil series.
  • On the Arklay Overpass, Jill speculates that there is no way out, and that Ashford may just be watching them on the cameras, as if the whole thing were some sort of sick game. Resident Evil: Apocalypse is, of course, an adaptation of a series of games and the fixed camera perspective in most of the earlier games resembles a mounted camera's perspective.

Resident Evil 2

  • Alice's visit to the gun shop at the start of Apocalypse is a reference to Resident Evil 2, where one of the leading characters takes shelter in a gun shop.
  • The character Angela Ashford may be a concept borrowed from Sherry Birkin, as they are both children, dressed in school uniforms, in need of rescue. Both of their fathers are also researchers working for Umbrella. The Ashford name, however, comes from the founders of Umbrella revealed in Resident Evil : Code Veronica.

Resident Evil 3: Nemesis

  • Jill wears the same outfit from Resident Evil 3: Nemesis.
  • Like his video game counterpart, Nemesis only speaks one word ("S.T.A.R.S."). Unlike his video game counterpart, he only speaks this line once whereas in the game, Nemesis speaks this line constantly during every encounter.
  • The graveyard scene is a reference to the Resident Evil Remake, Resident Evil 3: Nemesis, and Resident Evil Code: Veronica, where zombies also pop out of their graves.
  • The scene in which a zombie's head is reflected in a Raccoon City Police Department Motorcycle helmet, is a reference to a similar scene in the game's opening cut scene.
  • The nuclear weapon approach and explosion is a shot-for-shot recreation of the equivalent scene in the videogame's finale.

Game and Movie Differences

Movie Games
Jill was suspended from S.T.A.R.S. after events unknown. They are never explained. In the novelization Jill was suspended due to her report on zombies in the forest, but this is not canon. Jill resigns from S.T.A.R.S. after all attempts to expose the events at the mansion are ignored or blocked by R.P.D. Chief Brian Irons (who subsequently disbanded the unit), on William Birkin's payroll. She resigns to investigate Umbrella's doings in Raccoon City full time.
Raccoon City is nuked by Umbrella in an effort to cover up the outbreak. With Umbrella's marketing and economic muscle, they are able to manipulate the media into reporting it as an incident at the nuclear plant. The US government orders a nuclear missile strike on Raccoon City after a group of Tyrants defeated elements of the armed forces in a battle near an abandoned factory on the outskirts of the town (the aftermath of this battle can be seen in Resident Evil 3). Despite the political maneuvering of Umbrella, who wanted to study the effects of the city-wide infection, the strike is initiated. Later on in Resident Evil 4, it is known that the US government suspended the activities of Umbrella.
The T-Virus can be used for medical applications. It helped Angie to walk. In the games the virus is said to regenerate body cells, but it is unknown whether it works correctly to all body cells and can actually create a 'cure' for (muscle) disease, and if it can be controlled by an anti-virus. The only proven application of the T-Virus is to create bioweapons.
Lickers are created by injecting the T-Virus directly into living tissue. When they taste fresh blood, they mutate. Lickers are created when people infected by the T-Virus are exposed to a second dose. These creatures are accidental and were created due to the circumstances of the outbreak. They do not mutate after tasting blood.
Nemesis is killed after defending Alice from gunfire. It might be possible that the damage it received wasn't bad enough to make it mutate, but this is only a suggestion from the game. Though it's mutations from Nemesis didn't really show. Nemesis is killed after being dodged by Jill for a majority of the outbreak. After a series of battles, the Nemesis is reduced to a nebulous blob finally put to rest by two shots from the "Paracelsus Sword" weapon, a fixed magnetic coil gun brought in by US armed forces to fight off a squad of Tyrants.
Nemesis does not have tentacles, but does have a Gatling Gun and Rocket Launcher. Nemesis uses his T- infected tentacles (Actually the 'roots' of the Nemesis-parasite coming out through the host's body) to attack enemies as well as a Rocket Launcher. S.T.A.R.S. member Brad Vickers was killed with his tentacles, and later resumed animation as a zombie (only to be killed by either Leon S. Kennedy or Claire Redfield).
The outbreak in Raccoon occurred as a result of Umbrella researchers re-opening the Hive. The city is infected within hours. The outbreak occurs as a combination of monsters left over from the mansion incident and an assassination attempt on William Birkin for his G-Virus sample. As the assassin escaped with his work, Birkin injects himself with the G-Virus and wreaks havoc. In the process, the T-Virus is spilled and the rodent population in the sewer are infected, slowly spreading the virus to the citizens. The city is infected in less than a week.
The T-Virus is said to cause uncontrolled mutation. The G-Virus is the only virus that mutates uncontrollably and it cannot be passed by bites, but according to Anette Birkin (William Birkin's wife) "it is able to revitalize cellular functions". It requires direct inoculation or embryos implanted on a genetically compatible host. However in Resident Evil 2 the T-Virus is described as "a mutagenic toxin", and even though most of its victims turn into zombies, other creatures such as the lickers, the Tyrant and (possibly) Nemesis, giant spiders, mutated sharks, and oversized lampreys are products of infection. No positive effects of the T-virus have been observed in the games.
The Umbrella Corporation publicly flaunts their wealth and power. They funded the construction of Raccoon City and have great power worldwide. The Umbrella Corporation is a powerful company, yet they deal mostly in secret. Though their contributions have led to the development of Raccoon City, they do not flaunt their international power openly. To the public, they're known as a simple medical/health corporation, akin to Pfizer.
Nemesis was created as part of the "Nemesis Program", a project to create the ultimate bioweapon. It was created in America. It was unleashed by Umbrella within Raccoon City to test its abilities such as wiping out S.T.A.R.S. The Nemesis was an experimental bio-weapon created by the European branch by implanting a new kind of parasitic organism into an ordinary mass-produced Tyrant. In the first game it is revealed that the real reason for S.T.A.R.S involvement in the mansion incident was Albert Wesker's intention to test the bioweapons against "realistic targets" (armed, trained paramilitaries/military personnel). Nemesis takes time to train and perfect, since they are programmed to hunt specific targets. In Resident Evil 3, its mission was to hunt down and kill the remaining S.T.A.R.S. due to their involvement in the "Mansion Incident."
Alice is forced to battle the Nemesis as a final "test" by Major Timothy Cain to determine which bioweapon is the most powerful. This takes place before the Nemesis' death while trying to save Alice and the survivors after decidingly revolting against his creators. Jill Valentine is forced to defeat the Nemesis, now a gelatinous blob of organs, as it is preventing her to escape the factory towards the finale of the game. After being severely weakened by the "Paracelsus Sword" rail gun, Jill empties her Magnum into it, finishing it off completely.
Jill, Carlos, Angie, and L.J. free Alice from Umbrella headquarters after the Raccoon City nuking. Jill and Carlos escape from Raccoon (with or without Barry's help, depending on the ending). Where they head is unknown, but it seems they still intend to meet up with Chris Redfield in Europe.
Nicholai was a heroic, somewhat naive mercenary, eventually killed by two zombie dogs in the movie. Nicholai is a double-crossing, secret Umbrella agent, who is either killed by Nemesis, escapes in a helicopter or is shot down in a helicopter by Jill depending on the player's choices throughout the game.
Nemesis is computer-controlled and can be programmed with commands remotely from a laptop. Nemesis is autonomous, and follows his pre-set commands to wipe out S.T.A.R.S.
Carlos' uniform shows his last name spelled "Olivera." Carlos' last name is Oliveira.
The S.T.A.R.S. team consists of at least 25 operatives during the Raccoon City incident. Members include Jill Valentine, Peyton Wells, Commander Ryan Henderson and other unnamed characters. Chris and Barry (and other character from the games besides Jill) are nowhere to be seen. The S.T.A.R.S. team first consists of 11 members (excluding pilot Kevin Dooley), divided into two separate teams which were Alpha and Bravo. During their investigations of the Mansion incident, most of the team was killed off and reduced to 5 members when they escaped (without taking Wesker's revival into account). During the events of Resident Evil 3, however, Brad Vickers, the pilot of Alpha Team, is killed by Nemesis in front of the R.P.D. Precinct. S.T.A.R.S. was disbanded by Chief Irons after the Arklay Mountain incident and the armed elite officers fighting the zombies were actually members of the newly created Select Police Force.

Soundtrack

There are two albums for Resident Evil: Apocalypse. The first is the soundtrack, featuring music from and inspired by the movie. The second is the score, composed by Jeff Danna and performed by the Philharmonia Orchestra. The Score album features at least 2 tracks that were not featured in the film, notably "2 Wheels Hero" (possibly in reference to Alice's arrival in the church on a motorbike). This track is loud, part of it can be heard in a fan made trailer for "Resident Evil: Extinction" on YouTube.

DVD

File:ResidentEvilApocalypseRegion2.jpg
UK DVD cover

The Resident Evil: Apocalypse DVD was released on December 28, 2004 in North America and March 16, 2005 in Australia and New Zealand.

The UK region 2 DVD was released in February 2005. The release, whilst only having one disc, was almost exactly the identical to the North American release. The region 2 version features descriptive commentary for the blind. The cover also features Alice, like on the R1 DVD cover, but it in a gray-blue and black, with Alice in a graveyard with Raccoon City in ruins in the background.

Contents

Special Edition features DVD features:

  • Available subtitles: English
  • Available audio tracks: English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Commentary by director Alexander Witt, producer Jeremy Bolt, and executive producer Robert Kulzer.
  • Commentary by Milla Jovovich, Oded Fehr, and Sienna Guillory.
  • Commentary by writer/producer Paul W. S. Anderson and producer Jeremy Bolt.
  • Widescreen anamorphic and full-screen formats.
  • 20 deleted scenes.
  • Cast outtakes.
  • Game Over: Resident Evil Reanimated.
  • A six-part making-of Corporate Malfeasance: Featurette on the real-world similarities to the Umbrella Corporation.
  • Game Babes: Featurette on the emergence of the female stars in the movie.
  • Symphony of Evil: Featurette on the special effects used in the movie.
  • Poster gallery: A collection of winning submissions created by the finalists of the online poster design contest.
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Film Trailers

Region 2 Special Edition

Play.com lists a 2 disc special edition of Resident Evil: Apocalypse that features new packaging art. The DVD will be released in early September, probably to coincide with the release of Resident Evil: Extinction.

Extended Edition

The film's DVD release in Germany has an exclusive "Extended Edition", that reinstates most of the Deleted Scenes from the DVD and also, but not limited to.

Extended Scenes

  • An extended scene before Jill, Peyton and Terri enter the church, Terri whispers to Jill "What's going on? They were shooting on people. Innocent people, why didn't you do something? You are the police aren't you?" Jill ignores her, the scene continues as normal, but audio is a bit different in places.
  • A shot that was in the trailer where the camera spins around a gargoyle on top of the church, and a flash of lightning reveals a Licker, thrashing its tongue around.
  • A shot of Alice pulling a shard of glass out of her leg after Jill demands "Who the fuck are you?" and limping away.
  • After L.J. runs over the undead, he sees 2 topless strippers, and crashes his car. In the Extended Version, L.J. says something along the lines of "You're still looking good, baby. I'll still spend 5 dollars on you!" before crashing. This scene was in the novelization by Keith R.A. DeCandido.
  • After L.J. drops his guns before the Nemesis, he shouts abuse at him and dances whilst clicking his fingers and singing. Some of these shots are in the outtakes reel.
  • Finally, an exchange between Jill and Alice when they are walking past the phone boxes, where Alice asks "What are you staring at?" Jill responds "I'm not sure, what made you want to work for Umbrella?" from a wide angle, Alice says "A girl's gotta make a living." Jill laughs. This scene is featured in the deleted scenes for the U.S. version of the DVD.

Universal Media Disc

This version of Apocalypse is available for the PSP. Although it has no special features, the quality of picture is less than the DVD.

  • Widescreen - 1.78 (modified from the original 2.35 and fills the entire PSP screen).
  • Dolby Digital 2.0 - English, French, Spanish, Italian
  • Subtitles - English, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian - Optional

References

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