Gamers and moviegoers have been left divided by the first trailer for Zach Cregger's highly-anticipated Resident Evil reboot.
Zach Cregger Sparks Gamer Fury Over Resident Evil Reboot
Gamers and moviegoers have been left divided by the first trailer for Zach Cregger's highly-anticipated Resident Evil reboot.Based on the best-selling video gam...
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Based on the best-selling video game franchise of the same name, the new film follows a medical courier, played by star Austin Abrams, who must survive the night after delivering a package in the zombie-infested Raccoon City.
Cregger, who dominated the box office last year with the horror hit Weapons, wrote and directed the reboot.
The film has been called 'an action-packed, non-stop race for survival', and the trailer certainly delivers on that promise with plenty of scares.
However, longtime fans of the game series have been outraged by the upcoming film, as it doesn't follow any of the storylines or characters from the games.
'So, this is basically a generic horror movie, and they just slapped the Resident Evil name on it,' complained one gamer.
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Gamers and moviegoers have been left divided by the first trailer for Zach Cregger's highly-anticipated Resident Evil reboot
'This is just a generic zombie movie that has absolutely nothing to do with Resident Evil!' added another.
'Really not interested in another movie called "Resident Evil" that doesn't actually adapt the story or characters from the source material,' wrote a third.
However, some horror fans were more supportive of the project, with many pointing out that 2021's Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City was directly inspired by the games and turned out to be a huge critical and commercial flop.
'Folks seem to not be understanding that this movie is meant to replicate the journey of someone playing one of the games. Not be a direct adaptation of a game. Those haven’t worked either. It’s better to do an original film,' argued one fan.
'Zach Cregger could’ve just opted to do a run-of-the-mill adaptation of the video game. But instead went the route of doing his own thing while taking inspiration from the material. Massive respect. This looks GREAT,' gushed a second.
Cregger burst onto the scene in 2022 with the sleeper horror hit Barbarian.
He then followed it up with last year's Weapons, which grossed $270 million at the box office and earned actress Amy Madigan the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Cregger, a longtime fan of the Resident Evil games, put his hand up to direct the upcoming reboot and made sure to set his film in the same world as the games, despite following an original story and characters.
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The new film follows a medical courier, played by Euphoria star Austin Abrams, who must survive the night after delivering a package in the zombie-infested Raccoon City
The film has been called 'an action-packed, non-stop race for survival', and the trailer certainly delivers on that promise with plenty of scares
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Fans have been divided by the trailer so far, with some slamming the Cregger's vision for the franchise, while others have faith in the Weapons director
'I wanted to construct a story that could live in the world of Resident Evil and kind of be on the periphery of the events of Resident Evil 2, where Raccoon City is having its big night, but tell just another story that could be happening in parallel, that really honors the vibe and the pacing you get when you play the games,' he told Polygon.
Cregger also admitted that he didn't watch director Paul W.S. Anderson's Resident Evil films before helming the reboot.
'I was such a fan of the games, and they just didn’t look like the games to me,' he said.
'Maybe they’re great. I have no idea. But I just wasn’t interested because what’s great about the games is they're shrunk down into this single perspective. It’s about pacing and horror, and those movies just didn’t look like horror to me.'
Anderson helmed the first six films in the original Resident Evil franchise, which starred his wife Milla Jovovich.
Cregger is coming off the back of his last film Weapons, which dominated the box office and won an Academy Award for Amy Madigan's performance
The Paul W.S. Anderson Resident Evil films, which starred Milla Jovovich, grossed over $1.3 billion at the box office
Although the films were critically-panned, they did huge numbers at the box office, grossing around $1.3 billion in total.
The last entry, Resident Evil: The Final Chapter, was released in 2017 and grossed $312 million.
Sony Pictures attempted to reboot the franchise in 2021 with Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City.
Despite being more faithful to its video game source material, the movie tanked at the box office and received scathing reviews from fans and critics alike.
The following year, , which was billed as a reimagining of the franchise.
Despite receiving positive reviews from professional critics and performing well on the platform, it was canceled after just one season.
Zach Cregger's Resident Evil hits theatres September 18, 2026.
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