We Lose." There aren’t many creatures fighting each other that wouldn’t become more enticing with that tagline I’d watch two accountants thumb wrestle if that were the tagline. What was the impact? Whatever your thoughts on the film itself - and we’ll get to that - one undeniable impact is that it has a truly incredible tagline: "Whoever Wins. Jason, which was the highest-grossing film in either franchise’s history.
Think of it as two struggling, formerly competing companies merging just to keep each other alive. It was a little mini-trend before reboots truly took over: The start-over with a twist, a way not only to extend one franchise, but two.
#ALIEN VS PREDATOR COLLECTION MOVIE#
Jason, a film that’s a lot worse than this movie in a very on-brand way, had come out just the year before.
This was not without precedent, of course: Freddy vs.
He added in some old Egyptian mythology, cast Lance Henrikson as someone named “Bishop” to ensure some continuity, and then got to having the monsters fight. After the ending of 1990's Predator 2 first teased the possibility of a battle (you could see a Xenomorph skull in a Predator's trophy case), minds got racing, none more so than Anderson’s, who wrote up an extended pitch he’d been working on for eight years. Anderson’s, actually), who had a few hits with Mortal Kombat and Event Horizon (and had just made the first of six Resident Evil movies with his wife Milla Jovovich), was the perfect guy to make an Alien vs. Anderson's.Īnderson, the other Paul Anderson (the one whose movies have made more money that P.T. Predator shouldn’t exist? James Cameron was in serious talks to do a fifth Alien film, but once he heard AVP was in production, he dropped the whole thing, saying it would, “kill the validity of the franchise. it’d be Frankenstein meets Werewolf.” (His initial idea ultimately became Ridley Scott’s Prometheus.) A monster mash might not have been Cameron's style, but it definitely was Paul W.S. Why was it a big deal at the time? The best argument why Alien vs. The surprise, honestly, is that it took them that long to make it. It came out on Aug. 13, 2004, 16 years ago. Predator, which, in many ways, feels like the distillation of the internet at that period - two intense, nostalgia-driven fanbases finally getting their wish: They found out whether or not their dad can beat up your dad. The apex of this trend, or its nadir, depending on your perspective, is 2004’s Alien vs. Last time I looked, Mike Tyson was fighting a darned shark. Eventually, Freddy was fighting Jason and Batman was fighting Superman and it was mass chaos. But, this trend of pitting monsters and bad guys against each other couldn’t help but supersize in the world of internet fandom, where everybody’s inherent polarized nature has them lining up in the corners declaring that their guy is better than your guy. Two titans facing off has been a staple of genre filmmaking for decades King Kong was fighting Godzilla in the early 1960s and Universal was pitting its classic monsters against one another two decades before that. It is human nature - though, to be fair, foremost the nature of 12-year-old prepubescent boys - to see two formidable figures and immediately think, “Let’s make them fight!” Welcome to This Week in Genre History, where Tim Grierson and Will Leitch, the hosts of the Grierson & Leitch podcast, take turns looking back at the world’s greatest, craziest, most infamous genre movies on the week that they were first released.