The review embargo for Prey has finally lifted, so what are critics saying about this long-awaited Predator reboot? The social media reactions were glowing, ...
How Trachtenberg, Aison, and Midthunder interrogate that very question is a thrill, offering the most unexpected of movie treats: a once-stalled franchise that suddenly seems bursting with delights — and, yes, plenty of blood spatter." Prey made me wish the Predator franchise was turned into something like Assassin’s Creed, with each new entry touching on a different time period, exploring the mythos from a new lens." The movie’s sole focus on her lead character, Naru, means that the supporting roster comes off a little wooden, but when Prey’s tracking the young warrior’s duel with the Predator -- full of powerful imagery and creative kills -- it rarely falters." But maybe, in the case of this franchise, that marks a slight improvement over movies that wanted to be nothing but what has come before." "By the time Naru stands opposite the Predator in hand-to-face-pincer combat, coating herself in the creature’s phosphorescent green blood, it’s clear that even a “Predator” movie can now be styled as a lesson in how to be. It's also a much-needed fresh start for the series that allows Amber Midthunder to shine in a role that promises to put her on the map."
It worked particularly well for the first two films, but over the course of more sequels, spinoffs, and forays into games and comics, that high-level idea has ...
(One excellently gross scene shows the Predator in all its glory, while doused in bear blood.) But the film does an incredible job of slowly teasing out the main conflict. It terrorizes the humans in brief flashes of violence. This includes both some of the Comanche hunters and a group of French fur trappers. For the most part, Prey is a pleasantly slow buildup to the ultimate showdown between Naru and the Predator. On one side, we see Naru slowly growing into herself, trusting her instincts even when no one seems to believe her (or in her — with the exception of her supportive brother). She’s equal parts impatient, determined, and resourceful, all of which come in handy as she sorts out just what’s going on. But careful and observant Naru is the one who realizes something more is happening. She trains with weapons on her own, pushes her way into hunting excursions, and, when asked why she wants this so badly, says simply, “because you all think I can’t.” The presence of a certain alien forces her into that warrior / hunter role a little sooner than expected.
Prey just works. Cinematic scale, strong performances (Amber Midthunder is a phenom), beautiful attention to detail, top-notch action sequences... it's a ...
The shot composition is thoughtful and cinematic (it’s a great looking film), the editing is tight, and the score had gravitas. Taabe is performed with a cool strength (and he, too, gets some great action sequences, horse and all), but perhaps best is the relationship between the pair, the latter being supportive of the former’s drives in a lovely, film-atypical dynamic. The biggest issue, then, is that it’s going straight to streaming... it’s a solid outing that deserves the largest screen possible. Prey, the newest outing from 20th Century Studios, takes that check, writes a number with a bunch of zeroes after it, and cashes it proudly. Naru (Amber Midthunder), a young woman with dreams of going against the grain and being recognized for her hunting prowess, is seeking to prove her mettle for all to see.
10 Cloverfield Lane director Dan Trachtenberg co-wrote and directed Prey, a return to the iconic Predator horror series that started in 1987.
(Hint: Besides the obligatory Predator dialogue riff, there’s a connection to Predator 2 afoot, too.) Trachtenberg’s film wields the elemental appeal of watching sci-fi/horror weirdness bend the boundaries of the human-against-nature conflict. The simplicity of “women can kill as good as men” threatens to turn Naru into a Predator-fighting, bloodthirsty girlboss, but the no-nonsense scrappiness of Midthunder’s performance keeps that from happening. The other members of Naru’s tribe are there to naysay and/or become Predator fodder. He may be out there in the woods, but he isn’t exactly communing with the spirit of Terrence Malick. But when a series of mysterious signs indicates that an unfamiliar creature is stalking their territory, only Naru is willing to hunt it down. Before Disney bought 20th Century Fox in 2017, the film studio had become known as a purveyor of durable genre movies like the Alien, Predator, and X-Men series — and also as an interfering cost-cutter, defined by its willingness to set pivotal action sequences in generic parking lots and Canadian forests.
Director Dan Trachtenberg's 'Predator' prequel is an excellent alien thriller anchored by a strong performance from Amber Midthunder.
This slow burn of a start is a killer character introduction, made all the more engrossing thanks to Midthunder. Thanks to a solid amount of bloody violence, Prey earns its R-rating. Yet its fight scenes are more than just gore fests for the sake of gruesome spectacle. As soon as that realization kicks in, so does the main conflict of Prey, pitting an elite hunter against an aspiring one in a showdown to the death. That distance proves to be the film's not-so-secret weapon, because while Prey is clearly a Predator film, it doesn't feel like any iteration of the Predator stories we've seen before. However, Naru is the first person to realize there's a new, dangerous apex predator on the loose. Director Dan Trachtenberg's Predator prequel is a taut thriller that's easily the best addition to the franchise since the original.
While most of the Predator movies feel like action flicks interrupted by an alien incursion, Prey plays more like an art house movie at first.
And Prey review. Now, Prey review. While in theory it’s tougher to make a Predator movie that isn’t about a bunch of distinctive characters slowly being picked off, that’s thankfully not the case here. Also Prey review. That’s partly been due to actor salary negotiations, timing, and also the fact that the sequels never seem to do quite as well as the property’s name-recognition would suggest. The Comanche language is represented as English here, such that when non-Native characters enter the movie about halfway through, any “English” they speak is presumed to actually be Comanche. At that same point, the movie takes a turn into territory similar to The Revenant, with an alien killer thrown into the middle. And when Naru sees a fiery symbol in the sky, she presumes it’s a divine sign. More so than even Predators, which was actually set on another world, this feels like a New World in a metaphorical and historical (and Terrence Malick-style) sense. It’s a slow-paced look at — presumably authentic — Comanche life, although not quite bold enough to pull a Mel Gibson and have everyone speak Comanche. A dubbed version will be available, but any dub is rarely preferable to the original production dialogue. But thankfully, most will probably enjoy Prey. It might just be the most visually arresting in the series. The trailers for Prey call it the Predator‘s first hunt on Earth, but it’s really not. We meet Naru (Ambert Midthunder), a young woman who wants to go through the tribal process to become a warrior.
Amber Midthunder makes a spectacular action hero in this compelling survival story that just happens to be a 'Predator' prequel.
Prey is barely a Predator movie, which is why it’s the absolute best Predator movie in 35 years. It matters that the film’s narrative, about an undervalued hunter holding her own against an unthinkably challenging foe, works regardless of whether you’ve ever seen a Predator movie. Sure, it’s by default the best Predator movie since the first Predator movie. All due respect to Danny Glover’s over-the-top star turn in Predator 2, I’d argue that Prey is the first Predator sequel/prequel where the main human protagonist is more compelling than the monster. Prey is a generally engaging and often engrossing action-adventure film with a strong lead performance, theater-worthy production values, agreeably R-rated violence and just enough of a connection to the prior Predator films to appease that fandom. The best thing about Daniel Trachtenberg and Patrick Aison’s Prey is that it’s barely a Predator movie.
'Prey' proves to be an apropos title, as Dan Trachtenberg's film is cowed by John McTiernan's original 'Predator.'
This sensibility, common of American action movies of the ‘80s, feels authentically volatile in our skittish modern culture, as contemporary, woefully self-conscious genre offerings can’t hope to capture such anarchy. Of course, she’s right: A relative of the monster that will plague Arnold Schwarzenegger’s mercenary centuries in the future lurks nearby, armed and ready to party. Evil white people pop up to die as grist for the mill and that’s about it, as the tension between the Comanche and the European invaders is, at best, rudimentarily mined. The film is set 300 years in the past, in the Highland Plains of the Comanche nation, with a protagonist, Naru (Amber Midthunder), who has a problem redolent of many a Disney princess. Now, the potential annihilation of Naru’s tribe is an opportunity for her to come of age. So ripe, in fact, that it’s rather astonishing to consider that John McTiernan’s 1987 original is the only Predator that’s worth a damn.
The cast and filmmakers of Prey discuss bringing primal surprise back to the Predator franchise—and making a movie that truly honors its Comanche setting.
Then you saw it decloaked with the biomask on, and you thought, ‘Oh that’s what the Predator is!’ And then it still had yet another look, and that’s something we haven’t gotten from any of the movies since then.” That to me was the most mind-blowing and special part of this experience.” It also added to the film’s visceral return to nature in the Predator mythos. Trachtenberg cites Terrence Malick as a reference for the look of the film. It was also a thrill to make. To achieve that effect onscreen was a learning process for many involved, including the stars. “For me, this is amazing because we always wonder what life was like on the Great Plains back in the 1700s,” Myers beams after entering the Den of Geek studio at San Diego Comic-Con. “So it’s pretty amazing to bring people to see just that. Watch it once in Comanche and once in English.” It is set 300 years ago, before much of the North American continent had been colonized by European settlers, and tells the story of Naru (Amber Midthunder), a young Comanche woman who is a gifted hunter and tracker that wants to break gender norms in her community and prove she is likewise a great warrior. However, unlike recent, stumbling attempts to relaunch the Predator franchise, Prey also succeeds by mirroring a real culture and real world that has long been undervalued onscreen. They were, after all, about to make the first good Predator movie in nearly 40 years—and perhaps more importantly a movie that took Indigenous and First People’s experiences seriously. “I thought about how Native Americans, and specifically Comanche, are so often relegated to playing sidekicks or the villains,” Trachtenberg says, “never the hero.
Prey's Rotten Tomatoes score has been revealed, and it's a major win for Hulu's upcoming Predator reboot. You can find out how it compares to the rest of ...
In our review, we concluded by saying, "Prey delivers pure Predator pandemonium, and is the Predator franchise at its best. Prey is debuting on Hulu this Friday, and the hope is streaming numbers will be high enough to warrant a sequel. With a female lead and a unique 1700s setting in The Comanche Nation, the Predator finally feels relevant again.
Prey is a Predator prequel set 300 years in the past — and it's already earning remarkable reviews ahead of its release on Friday.
Predator fans have had to endure a lot of underwhelming and straight-up bad films over the past few decades, but it seems that Prey is the prequel that we truly deserve. As noted, the film will be streaming from Friday (August 5) on Hulu in the U.S., and over in the U.K., it’ll drop on Disney Plus on the same date. Heck, even viewers with no interest in the Predator movies till now might want to give Prey a shot by the sounds of it. This is a franchise high for the Predator series, with only 1987’s Predator on 80% landing anywhere near. The film currently scores a very strong 95% on Rotten Tomatoes (opens in new tab). Prey is scheduled to launch on Hulu on Friday, August 5 and the pre-release signs look extremely promising.
The wide open spaces of Alberta look fantastic, there's plenty of monster mayhem and action, and the striking score by Sarah Schachner deserves to be blasted ...
As it yanks the bear from its pursuit, lifting it up for the kill, the invisible Predator is painted into view by an outpouring of blood. This gives the creature a kindred spirit of sorts in Naru ( Amber Midthunder), a young warrior who wishes to hunt like the males in her tribe, including her brother, Taabe ( Dakota Beavers). Naru is teased by the guys, who state that hunting is men’s work, but we learn she can hold her own in a fight. The Predator’s modus operandi is the same, however: it is a hunter and it’s looking for trophies of prey. “Prey” bills itself as an origin story of the first Predator alien to appear on Earth. This one is fitted with slightly retro versions of the weapons wielded by the late actor Kevin Peter Hall in the first film. Considering the recent cancellations of films scheduled for upcoming release, I suppose I should be thankful that “Prey” can be seen anywhere, including on services to which I do not subscribe. So, why is Disney dumping an entry in the popular “ Predator” series on Hulu in the middle of the summer?
The Predator prequel is finally here, featuring a closer look at the origin story of the lethal hunter. The upcoming movie is the fifth installment in the ...
“Set in the Comanche Nation 300 years ago, Prey is the story of a young woman, Naru, a fierce and highly skilled warrior,” reads the synopsis. The Prey release date is set for 3 a.m. ET/12 a.m. PT on Friday, Aug. 5. The upcoming movie is the fifth installment in the franchise featuring one of the most iconic creatures in sci-fi genre history.
The world wasn't calling out for yet another Predator movie but 10 Cloverfield Lane's Dan Trachtenberg finds mileage in a light-footed prequel led by Native ...
Said smashing is done with gusto from 25-year-old Midthunder who rises to the challenge of taking on the Predator even if her character’s ascent from unsure warrior-in-training to top-of-the-food-chain action hero is missing a few beats or, dare I say, a training montage. While it really shouldn’t be, it feels genuinely new to see a genre film of this scale centred on an almost entirely Native cast (the only white characters are odious French invaders, natch). It’s worth applauding not because of the mere fact of what it is and what it means but because screenwriter Patrick Aison (a TV pro with credits including Jack Ryan and Wayward Pines), finds a way to make it all seem perfectly seamless, the setting an inventive way to impose a new set of restrictions on a story we’ve seen a few too many times before. But when Naru notices a new kind of predator, one who can’t simply be hunted as a bear or lion would, she finds a way to prove herself and save her people.
By focusing on the stories of the human characters—in a uniquely anachronistic setting—director Dan Trachtenberg rekindles interest in the uneven film ...
This is the shot in the arm that the franchise needed—a confident addition to its timeline, populated with moments that will leave long-time fans grinning and will encourage newcomers to explore the rest of the franchise. Alongside their respect for the Comanche, to whom the film is dedicated (and producer Jhane Meyers is a Comanche and Blackfeet American Indian, ensuring respect and authenticity in its depictions of their culture), there is a giddiness in the filmmaking that suggests that the film was a passion project for all involved. Stunt coordinators Steven McMichael and Jeremy Marinas conjure magic magic with mostly primitive weapons like bows and arrows, hatchets, and swords, giving the fights the kind of brisk pacing and visceral impact that action junkies expect in a post-John Wick film landscape. After Naru’s first confrontation with the Predator, the film continuously escalates and it becomes a gauntlet run of near escapes and propulsive action, depicted in decidedly cool but never larger-than-life terms. Aison establishes what hunting means to the Comanche, defines the roles expected of men and women in their tribe, and spotlights Naru’s competitive relationship with her older brother, Taabe, who’s played with empathy and star-making confidence by newcomer Dakota Beavers. Trachtenberg and cinematographer Jeff Cutter, reteaming from their work on 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016), take great lengths to create a sense of naturalism and beauty, both in the landscape and performances, that leads naturally into the eventual showdown with an alien audiences know is waiting in the brush. With Dan Trachtenberg’s Prey, the long-running Predator franchise finally has an entry that can stand as an equal to the original film, precisely because it narrows its focus on the story elements that matter dramatically, instead of unnecessarily expanding the franchise’s mythology.
The “Predator” franchise gets a prequel and the Comanche Nation gets a space invader in this unremarkable adventure.
Yet despite a female-empowerment theme and an adversary fairly bristling with fancy weaponry, “Prey” never builds a head of steam. Taking note of the bloody remains, Naru (Amber Midthunder), a young Comanche woman, and her brother (Dakota Beavers) determine to track the perpetrator. Dropped out of a spaceship in the Northern Great Plains in 1719, the beast proceeds to research the local wildlife.
Amber Midthunder plays a young warrior battling an alien in 'Prey.' (CNN) For those who remember the original "Predator," the ...
Until that climactic showdown, the best thing going for it is Midthunder, whose recent roles include "The Ice Road" When it comes to battling Predators, brains tend to trump brawn. Naru soon gets the test of several lifetimes, recognizing that the alien (played by Dane DiLiegro, a 6'9" former basketball player) isn't an animal but something different, while also learning its strengths, weaknesses and the peculiar game that it plays in terms of who and what it chooses to kill.
More specifically, the young Naru (Amber Midthunder), who desperately wants to prove herself, especially to fellow warrior Taabe (Dakota Beavers). Such an ...
Series-wise, this sits somewhere between the fist-pumping theatrics of the original film and 2010′s under-loved and excellently cast Predators (we didn’t deserve Adrien Brody as a Predator hunter then, and we still don’t now). Which makes it all the more disappointing that Prey is skipping theatres entirely for a streaming debut (Hulu in the U.S., Disney+ with Star here) – the casualty of short-term, pandemic-rushed thinking. (One large caveat: All the characters speak a rather contemporary form of English, even though audiences have proven time and again that they can handle subtitles.) Yet Prey’s creative team appear to have spent just as much energy and time studying the hallmarks of classic genre filmmaking, resulting in a spectacle as visceral as its body count is high. The proceedings are executed with the kind of gorehound-y glee that these films require: the slayings are as inventive as they are plentiful. alien mayhem – memories can get sloppy and mistakes can get made. Mistakes like Shane Black’s 2018 sequel, simply titled The Predator, whose story and pacing were as messy as the extraterrestrial’s many onscreen kills. As the Predator begins to pick off Naru’s tribe – and a loutish pack of French fur-trappers, too, for good measure – our untested hero must match wits and weaponry with an impossible enemy.
A 1700s set "Predator" movie? Sure, why not.
She gets her chance when a Predator enters the picture, dropped off by spaceship from the skies above. It's a credit to 1987's original "Predator" that 35 years later, we're still dealing with "Predator" movies at all. monster essentials, and if it's the best entry in the series since the first, well, we've already established that as faint praise.