It's competently executed, focusing mostly on action, self-sacrifice and heroics, but I couldn't help but notice that there are three main characters: two non-white male characters and one white female granny. And the white female granny survives, where other white male characters didn't. They portray her as the ultimate bad-arse. Also, in one of the other stories we had one white male character sacrifice himself in order to save the non-white male character.
Racial coding and skin color is important according to the DEI ideologues. In fact, it may be the most important thing in the whole world according to DEI ideologues. Therefore, while definitely entertaining, this is still a racialized anti-white product of DEI fascists and should be thrown on the bonfire. :')
A granny? Come on lol
What's worse is the amount of normies who defend this goyslop.
The illogical nonsense in this film was through the roof; pure rubbish.
Yet normies are all over normie review boards and videos clamouring about how great this film is; when presented with the stuff that makes no sense, they just respond with "It's fiction, it's not supposed to make sense".
Really paints a grim picture for the average intelligence.
I think mostly people were willing to give it a pass, because it's been a while since they've seen such an animated movie with such hardcore violence, in addition to being part of the Predator franchise.
That's such a poor argument. If there aren't limitations or realisms or rules, even in fiction, then the story can't be compelling.
Exactly!
It's what made the first four Alien films compelling (even if Alien 3 and Alien Resurrection have their problems), and it's what made the first two Predator films fairly believable.
I recently rewatched Predator 2 and Alien: Resurrection, and none of the humans had super abilities; none of them were doing things only superhumans could pull off. Despite their flaws, one thing that at least can be said even for those films, is that the action direction and characterisations were at least consistent and believable.
The realism is what keeps you grounded in the suspension of disbelief. But once everyone starts doing wacky stuff like in Killer of Killers, there's nothing compelling about it because we can always expect some deus ex machina to save the day.