Resident Evil: No Escuro Absoluto
Título original: Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,8/10
14 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
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O Agente Federal Leon S. Kennedy se une à funcionária da TerraSave Claire Redfield para investigar um surto de zumbis. Baseado na popular série de videogames com o mesmo nome.O Agente Federal Leon S. Kennedy se une à funcionária da TerraSave Claire Redfield para investigar um surto de zumbis. Baseado na popular série de videogames com o mesmo nome.O Agente Federal Leon S. Kennedy se une à funcionária da TerraSave Claire Redfield para investigar um surto de zumbis. Baseado na popular série de videogames com o mesmo nome.
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Resumo
Reviewers say 'Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness' receives mixed feedback. CGI animation is lauded for its high quality and realism. Fans enjoy the return of characters like Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield. However, the storyline is criticized as generic, predictable, and lacking depth. Some find the plot too political and disconnected from core horror elements. Pacing and episode length are contentious, with some feeling the series is too short and rushed. Despite these issues, many fans still find it enjoyable.
Avaliações em destaque
And here I stumbled upon the 2021 Netflix animated CGI series "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" by sheer random luck. Yeah, I didn't even know that they had made this. So of course, I gobbled it up in one sitting when I stumbled upon it on Netflix.
"Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is watchable, and that was about it. Yeah, the contents to the first season, which consists of a staggering four episodes, it just bland and mediocre. And if you have seen the 2012 "Biohazard: Damnation" or the 2017 "Resident Evil: Vendetta" animated CGI movies, then you know what you are in for here with "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness".
The storyline told in "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is essentially the same as in every other foray into the "Resident Evil" universe. There is an outbreak of infected people and of course Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield happen to be involved. And then there is the obligatory larger and more menacing mutation of course.
So yeah, "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" was pretty much textbook how-to-cash-in-on-the-Resident-Evil-franchise-and-make-a-CGI-movie here, for better or worse.
Now, I am not saying that "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" was bad. No, no, not at all. What I am saying, though, is that it is bland and mediocre.
Sure, the CGI in "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is through the roof. I was really impressed with the level of detail and the whole appearance of it all. It just looks phenomenal. And it is really pure eye-candy here for us viewers.
However, pretty CGI can only do so much for lukewarm and mediocre storyline, you know. And this is where "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" failed. Because the storyline was just too generic and predictable.
And I must admit that I am rather fed up with always seeing Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield in this CGI animated movies. Sure, I get they are fan favorites, but come on. Every single time there is an outbreak of the T-virus somewhere in the world, two seconds later we have Leon and/or Claire on the screen.
Sure, "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is watchable, but it was essentially just another run-of-the-mill foray into the franchise. So don't expect anything groundbreaking here.
My rating of "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" lands on a mediocre five out of ten stars. I loved the CGI, oh yes I did. But the contents of the story was just too mundane and have been seen over and over throughout the course of the "Resident Evil" entries put out there in movie or animated movie format. Sure, I will keep watching it, if the show continues beyond this bland first season, as it is a zombie series after all and set in the "Resident Evil" universe.
"Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is watchable, and that was about it. Yeah, the contents to the first season, which consists of a staggering four episodes, it just bland and mediocre. And if you have seen the 2012 "Biohazard: Damnation" or the 2017 "Resident Evil: Vendetta" animated CGI movies, then you know what you are in for here with "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness".
The storyline told in "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is essentially the same as in every other foray into the "Resident Evil" universe. There is an outbreak of infected people and of course Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield happen to be involved. And then there is the obligatory larger and more menacing mutation of course.
So yeah, "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" was pretty much textbook how-to-cash-in-on-the-Resident-Evil-franchise-and-make-a-CGI-movie here, for better or worse.
Now, I am not saying that "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" was bad. No, no, not at all. What I am saying, though, is that it is bland and mediocre.
Sure, the CGI in "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is through the roof. I was really impressed with the level of detail and the whole appearance of it all. It just looks phenomenal. And it is really pure eye-candy here for us viewers.
However, pretty CGI can only do so much for lukewarm and mediocre storyline, you know. And this is where "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" failed. Because the storyline was just too generic and predictable.
And I must admit that I am rather fed up with always seeing Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield in this CGI animated movies. Sure, I get they are fan favorites, but come on. Every single time there is an outbreak of the T-virus somewhere in the world, two seconds later we have Leon and/or Claire on the screen.
Sure, "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" is watchable, but it was essentially just another run-of-the-mill foray into the franchise. So don't expect anything groundbreaking here.
My rating of "Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness" lands on a mediocre five out of ten stars. I loved the CGI, oh yes I did. But the contents of the story was just too mundane and have been seen over and over throughout the course of the "Resident Evil" entries put out there in movie or animated movie format. Sure, I will keep watching it, if the show continues beyond this bland first season, as it is a zombie series after all and set in the "Resident Evil" universe.
Great graphics and animations but when I thought I started to understand the storyline it was over. I've been waiting awhile for this one and expected much more. (yeah I have played all the resident evil games)
This was ok. If you've seen other Resident Evil animated movies, this won't surprise you. This is basically all it is; a RE movie cut up into 4 chunks. If you're truly going to do a RE series, it has to be longer than 4 episodes. 6 at the very minimum.
It still is impressive CGI and I'm sure it probably is very cost consuming. My hope is that enough people will watch that they green light more episodes because there is a lot of story to tell in this universe if done properly.
It still is impressive CGI and I'm sure it probably is very cost consuming. My hope is that enough people will watch that they green light more episodes because there is a lot of story to tell in this universe if done properly.
Individual scenes weren't too bad, the overarching plot and premise are okay, and CGI was quite good. But when sequenced together, it was very hard to watch. There was no setup, no development, no climax... everything was flat. Even as a RE fans who finished multiple games and know a few things about character and plot, it was impossible to care about characters and what's going on. And the plot just went on and on and on without inciting any emotion when watching it. Even in one of the big conspiracy revelation, it felt like "uh, okay" at best. It's a huge missed opportunity because again, individual scenes and overall premise wasn't bad. It just poorly presented as a whole.
First, it's way to short.
Second, sometimes the story seems to become interesting just too let you dissapointed few minutes later.
Third, the animation seems to come out of a PS3 - Xbox 360 game. I mean, any cut scenes inside Resident Evil 2 Remake, which are made inside the game engine, is way more appealing than any scenes on Infinite Darkness.
This was suppose to be a series inspire by Resident Evil early games, not a single moment feels like it.
There is a lot a work to to do in the second season to improve all of it.
Second, sometimes the story seems to become interesting just too let you dissapointed few minutes later.
Third, the animation seems to come out of a PS3 - Xbox 360 game. I mean, any cut scenes inside Resident Evil 2 Remake, which are made inside the game engine, is way more appealing than any scenes on Infinite Darkness.
This was suppose to be a series inspire by Resident Evil early games, not a single moment feels like it.
There is a lot a work to to do in the second season to improve all of it.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesSet between the events of Resident Evil 4 (2005) and Resident Evil 5 (2009).
- ConexõesFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Geeked Week for Freaks (2021)
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- Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness
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- Tempo de duração26 minutos
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- 1.33 : 1
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