WT

Resident Evil

2002 · Directed by Paul W. S. Anderson

🧘4

Woke Score

35

Critic

🍿69

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 31 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1400 of 1469.

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Synopsis

When a virus leaks from a top-secret facility, turning all resident researchers into ravenous zombies and their lab animals into mutated hounds from hell, the government sends in an elite military task force to contain the outbreak.

Consciousness Assessment

Resident Evil presents itself as a straightforward zombie action thriller, a 2002 video game adaptation unconcerned with the progressive cultural preoccupations that would later dominate cinema discourse. Milla Jovovich's Alice functions as a capable action protagonist, though her presence registers less as a statement about feminist representation and more as a pragmatic casting choice for a combat-heavy narrative. The film's ensemble includes actors of color in supporting military roles, but these characters exist as functional archetypes rather than subjects of meaningful representation.

The narrative operates entirely within the logic of genre convention. There is no climate consciousness, no critique of corporate capitalism despite the corporate research facility setting, no body positivity concerns, no neurodivergent representation, no revisionist historical agenda, and no thematic lecturing. Paul W.S. Anderson's direction prioritizes visceral action sequences and practical effects over social commentary. The film asks nothing of its audience beyond engagement with its zombie premise.

What emerges is a cultural artifact that predates the specific moment we're measuring. Resident Evil belongs to an earlier era of action cinema when such films operated without the burden of contemporary social consciousness. It is neither progressive nor regressive by modern standards, simply indifferent to the entire framework. The minimal woke score reflects not moral failure but rather temporal displacement, a film speaking to the concerns of 2002 rather than 2024.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

35%from 24 reviews
New Times (L.A.)90

Jovovich isn't at her best, but that's mainly because her character is required to be in shock most of the movie, except when she remembers that she's a Charlie's Angel, or happily sheds clothing to maintain that R-rating. Frankly, most of us can live with that.

Luke Y. ThompsonRead Full Review →
Baltimore Sun63

About as good as the genre gets.

Chris KaltenbachRead Full Review →
Chicago Tribune63

One of the few video game movies to truly re-create the gaming experience -- from the three-dimensional maps to the structure of encountering increasingly grisly and dangerous foes at higher levels of play.

Robert K. ElderRead Full Review →
Miami Herald0

Such a bad movie that its luckiest viewers will be seated next to one of those ignorant pinheads who talk throughout the show.

Charles SavageRead Full Review →