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Species II

 
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Species II

  • Director: Peter Medak
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Horror
  • Themes: Metamorphosis, Femmes Fatales, Evil Aliens
  • Main Cast: Michael Madsen, Natasha Henstridge, Marg Helgenberger, Mykelti Williamson, George Dzundza
  • Release Year: 1998
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In the science-fiction thriller Species (1995), Natasha Hentsridge appeared as the beautiful but deadly Sil, a human-alien DNA combo. In this sequel, Hentsridge portrays Eve, a government experiment concocted to gain an understanding of how to combat future aliens, while Michael Madsen and Marg Helgenberger repeat their roles from the earlier film. When astronaut Patrick Ross (Justin Lazard) returns from the first manned Mars expedition, he's infected with the same DNA that spawned Sil and Eve. Hailed as a hero, Ross is pressed into politics by his father (James Cromwell), a senator. Any woman who beds the sexually active Ross is immediately impregnated, with embryos quickly developing and killing the mother. Ross hides the offspring on a family estate, as LA cops begin to detect a pattern in the female deaths. At the lab where scientists are monitoring Eve, Dr. Laura Baker (Helgenberger) realizes that Eve has a telepathic link with Ross, and that these two hybrids hope to couple. Press Lennox (Madsen) and Colonel Burgess (George Dzundza) figure Eve can be used to lead them to Ross. Cleared as a murder suspect, Mars mission astronaut Dennis Gamble (Mykelti Williamson), joins Lennox and Baker and gets in on the action as everyone involved closes in on Ross. Richard Belzer does a cameo as the President of the U.S., while Peter Boyle makes an uncredited appearance as a scientist. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide

Cast

James Cromwell - Sen. Ross; Justin Lazard - Patrick Ross; Myriam Cyr - Anne Sampas; Sarah Wynter; Baxter Harris; Scott Morgan; Peter Boyle; Richard Belzer

Credit

Mark Zuelzke - Art Director, Tom Hartig - Boom Operator, Cathy Sandrich - Casting, Amanda Mackey-Johnson - Casting, Pat Moran - Casting, Richard Bruno - Costume Designer, Benjamin Rosenberg - First Assistant Director, Shelly Ziegler - First Assistant Director, Peter Medak - Director, Mic Rodgers - Second Unit Director, Richard Nord - Editor, Dennis Feldman - Executive Producer, Sherri Bramlett - Hair Styles, Ron Scott - Hair Styles, Carol Flaisher - Location Manager, Vikki Williams - Line Producer, Ed Shearmur - Composer (Music Score), B.B. King - Songwriter, Richard Snell - Makeup, Steve Johnson - Makeup Special Effects, David Insley - Camera Operator, Thomas Loizeaux - Camera Operator, Stuart Stein - Camera Operator, Allen D. Easton - Camera Operator, Tom Schnaidt - Camera Operator, Miljen "Kreka" Kljakovic - Production Designer, Matthew Leonetti - Cinematographer, Perry Husman - Production Manager, Frank Mancuso, Jr. - Producer, Suzette Sheets - Set Designer, Maria Baker - Set Designer, Gerald Sullivan - Set Designer, The Digital Magic Co. - Special Effects, Terry P. Chapman - Special Effects, Matthew J. Downey - Special Effects, Marvin Felton - Special Effects, Dave Goyette - Special Effects, Louis Lindwall - Special Effects, J.W. McCormick - Special Effects, Mike Tice - Special Effects, Steve Nelson - Sound/Sound Designer, Dick Ziker - Stunts, Stan Barrett - Stunts, Jeffrey Lee Gibson - Stunts, James M. Halty - Stunts, Mike Runyard - Stunts, Tim Trella - Stunts, Tabby Hanson - Stunts, Cheryl Bermeo - Stunts, Edward Conna - Stunts, David M. Barrett - Stunts Coordinator, Joseph Grossberg - Special Effects Supervisor, Ralph Maiers - Special Effects Supervisor, Chris Brancato - Screenwriter, Harlem Logan - Production Assistant, Marcy Arnold - Production Assistant, Alicia Beytes - Production Assistant, D. Christopher Johnson III - Production Assistant, Michelene Mundo - Production Assistant, Tim J. Nelson - Production Assistant, Heather Plott - Production Assistant, Roland N. Thai - Sound Effects Editor, Dorian Cheah - Sound Effects Editor, Bob Hall - First Assistant Camera, David Sammons - First Assistant Camera, Mark Santoni - First Assistant Camera, Pat Blymyer - Gaffer, Lloyd Barcroft - Key Grip, Alison Sherman - Production Coordinator, Wendy Mashburn - Production Supervisor, Frank Blair - Properties Master, Joe Barnett - Re-Recording Mixer, Matthew Waters - Re-Recording Mixer, John Ross - Re-Recording Mixer, Joanie Blum - Script Supervisor, Jason Roberts - Second Assistant Director, Shari Hanger - Second Assistant Director, Alison Rosa - Second Assistant Director, Jeff Jarvis - Special Effects Coordinator, Kyle C. Rudolph - Steadicam Operator, Bruce Birmelin - Still Photographer, Gregory M. Gerlich - Supervising Sound Editor, Catharine Fletcher Incaprera - Costume/Wardrobe, Bruce Reik - Costume/Wardrobe, Shepherd Frankel - Assistant Art Director, Victoria Bruno - Assistant Costumer Designer, Doug Armstrong - Assistant Location Manager, Robert Ballentine - Assistant Location Manager, Rebecca Gibson - Assistant Production Coordinator, A. Charles Carnaggio - Assistant Properties, Robert Getty - Assistant Sound Editor, Mercedes Danforth - Casting Associate, John Strawbridge - Casting Associate, William "W" Gilpin - Construction Coordinator, Laurie Riley - Costumes Supervisor, Michael Hertlein - Dialogue Editor, Bob McNabb - Dialogue Editor, Mark Bolin - Dolly Grip, Bernadette Tanchauco - First Assistant Accountant, Katy Genovese - First Assistant Accountant, David Hickey - First Assistant Accountant, John Van Horn - First Assistant Accountant, Jonathan Chibnall - First Assistant Editor, Mark Rathaus - First Assistant Editor, Peter Mergus - First Assistant Editor, Craig Jurkiewicz - Foley Editor, Hugo Peña - Key Costumer, Perri Sorel - Key Make-up, Troy Myers - Leadman, Kristina Peterson - Second Second Assistant Director, Albert Ford, Jr. - Set Dresser, Thomas Hicks, Jr. - Set Dresser, Eric Lichtfuss - Set Dresser, Stephen G. Shifflette - Set Dresser, Liz Weber - Set Dresser, Christopher Barbour - Set Production Assistant, Julian Brain - Set Production Assistant, Jordan Fox - Set Production Assistant, David "Muddy" Waters - Set Production Assistant, Michael Luckeroth - Transportation Captain, Gerald Titus - Transportation Captain, Heather Hoffman - Set Decorator, Thomas Jones - ADR Supervisor, Jerrold Brooks - Construction Foreman, Lucy Sustar - Foley Mixer, Mary Erstad - Foley Mixer, Eric Pascarelli - Motion Control Camera, Kate Reckner Ridgley - Production Secretary, Jeff Johnson - Set Medic/First Aid, Ken Clark - Special Effects Foreman, Nancy Garber - Art Department Coordinator, James Burt - Assistant Music Editor, Paul Hill - Visual Effects Compositor, Brian Hanable - Digital Effects Compositor, Janet Quen - Digital Effects Compositor, Brian Bero - Puppeteer, Michael O'Brien - Puppeteer

Similar Movies

Femalien; Endangered Species; Alone in the Dark
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Wikipedia: Species II
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Species II
Directed by Peter Medak
Produced by Dennis Feldman
Frank Mancuso Jr.
Written by Chris Brancato
Dennis Feldman
Starring Michael Madsen
Natasha Henstridge
Marg Helgenberger
Music by Edward Shearmur
Cinematography Matthew F. Leonetti
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) April 10, 1998
Country  United States
Language English
Gross revenue $19,221,939 (domestic) [1]
Preceded by Species
Followed by Species III

Species II (a.k.a Species 2: Offspring and Species 2: Origins) is a 1998 sequel to the 1995 film Species. It stars Natasha Henstridge, Michael Madsen and Marg Helgenberger, all of whom are reprising their roles from the first film. The film was a critical and commercial failure and was heavily disliked by co-star Michael Madsen (along with his other film BloodRayne), however, it retained a cult following.

Contents

Plot summary

The movie begins roughly two years after the events of Species. It begins with a trio of American astronauts (Anne Sampas, Dennis Gamble & Patrick Ross) on a mission to Mars. Patrick is the only astronaut that lands on the surface and is shown collecting soil samples. When he plants the American flag, he is instantly hailed a hero. In a cross-cut, Dr. Herman Cromwell (Peter Boyle) is seen in an insane asylum, shouting "I told them not to go!" After Ross returns to the shuttle and the three astronauts prepare for the return journey home, one of the soil samples is shown to have contained alien DNA. The temperature on the ship thaws out the DNA bringing it to life causing it to break free from the tube and infect the three astronauts. Though one of the astronauts, Dennis Gamble (Mykelti Williamson), carries the sickle cell gene that prevents the alien's assimilation, the others, Patrick Ross (Justin Lazard) and Anne Sampas (Myriam Cyr), are, unknown to them, speedily infected by the alien DNA on the journey back to Earth. The astronauts have vague memories of something awful having occurred, but cannot recall details.

Meanwhile, back on Earth, a clone of Sil, named Eve (Natasha Henstridge), has been created. Engineered to be more docile than her predecessor, she is part of another attempt to understand the alien life form and prepare for defense should it ever arrive on Earth. This program is run by Dr. Laura Baker (Marg Helgenberger), who takes over the project after the late Dr. Xavier Fitch.

The trio return from Mars and after undergoing tests, are given a sexual quarantine of ten days. Patrick, the son of U.S. Senator Judson Ross (played by James Cromwell), attends a function being held in his honor. While there, Dennis and Anne are wondering where Patrick is at such a big moment. Melissa (Patrick's girlfriend) tells them that he hasn't been feeling well and that he is resting but really, he is in the bar lounge making out with a woman referred to as the Debutante. They are interrupted when he is called up to the stage to give a speech so she invites him up to her hotel room. After giving the speech, he leaves the function to meet her in her room, where he finds her there and also finds that she has brought her sister and they claim that they 'share everything' together. Patrick walks into the room and shuts the door behind him. He is next seen having sex with the Debutante while her sister is watching and waiting for her turn. After he finishes having sex with the debutante, her sister strips and claims that it is "her turn" she jumps into the bed to have sex with Patrick. While they are having sex, he begins to sprout tentacles as he slowly starts to transform into a terrifying alien incubus entity. Because she is getting carried away whilst having sex with him, she doesn't notice his alien form until she finds her hands stroking his tentacles and she starts to scream and although she pleads for him to stop, he carries on anyway while the Debutante is in the bathroom going through 9 months of pregnancy within 5 minutes until the alien baby growing inside her causes her stomach to burst open. Shortly after, the sister also gives birth. Neither woman survives. Patrick buries their bodies and hides the children inside his childhood shed. During Patrick's sexual activity Eve shows signs of physiological excitement.

Meanwhile, Dr. Orinsky, who took the astronauts' blood samples, is looking at Patrick's blood under a microscope. Just as he finds alien DNA in his blood, the bottle with Patrick's blood inside rolls off the table and shatters. The puddle of blood then flows forward and seeps into the wall. As Orinsky looks on in shock, an arm of tentacles bursts from the wall and disembowels Orinsky. As he is dying, he grabs his cell phone and calls Dr. Cromwell. He tells him that his old apprentice was right about the possibility of alien infection. After Orinsky dies, his wounds are examined and alien DNA is found. However, the DNA does not match that of Eve's.

The government then summons Press Lennox (Michael Madsen), now the owner of a private security firm. After meeting with Dr. Orinsky's old apprentice, Lennox and Baker begin searching for the astronauts. They search first for Patrick but he can not be found. They then search for Anne Sampas, the female astronaut. Patrick is shown to be at his hunting lodge with Melissa. She tells him that she is very happy to finally have him all to herself. She tells him that she loves him and although at first he doesn't want to have sex because he feels that something isnt right, they have sex anyway.

As Lennox and Baker are driving to the Sampas residence, Anne and her husband Harry are having sex. By the time Laura and Press get there, Anne instantly becomes pregnant and screams to her husband to call for help. Just as he is about to call, Anne suddenly gives birth to her alien offspring, which kills her husband. Press breaks through the door and shoots the creature as Laura gasses it to death. Anne does not survive.

After they perform an autopsy on Anne, they find that her DNA does not match that found in Orinsky's wounds. The team finds Dennis Gamble, but after a thorough blood test find that he was not infected due to his sickle trait, (Dennis does not have sickle cell anemia himself but he is a carrier, making him inadequate for the alien DNA) they discover that the DNA in Orinsky's wounds belong to Patrick. The team then focuses on finding him. Meanwhile, at Anne's autopsy, alien tentacles erupt from her skull but are chopped in half by the pathologist's reflex slash.

The next morning, Patrick wakes up next to Melissa's mutilated body and yet another alien child. Horrified at what he has done, he washes all the blood off himself, then puts on his air force uniform, grabs one of his hunting rifles, and goes out onto the backyard deck to commit suicide (hoping it would stop his alien self from killing more innocent lives). Dennis arrives just as Patrick sticks the barrel of the gun into his mouth and shoots his head off. Seconds later, his entire head regenerates. He then discovers his new alien instincts (theoretically, upon blowing his own head off, his former human self is gone, and that his sinister alien half has slowly taken over) so he decides to impregnate every woman he can. Dennis informs Press about Patrick's whereabouts. They soon arrive at a motel and discover the mutilated body of a prostitute. Again, Eve responds physically to Patrick's sexual activity.

Patrick goes to a local club where he manages to charm one of the strippers into sex by offering her a large sum of cash. Afterwards, he buries her body before taking his son to the shed, where he has a large family of children. Though Baker is resistant, the team eventually activates Eve's alien DNA in an attempt to track Patrick, due to Eve's telepathic connection to him. She detects him at a supermarket. When a woman recognizes Patrick's face from a cereal box and asks him to sign the box, Patrick drags her out of the store and into a van in an attempt to rape her. But when he senses Eve, he lets the woman go. Patrick then wants to mate with Eve.

Press and Gamble find Patrick and take him to the lab to get tested. But he reveals that he only agreed to go so he could find Eve. When they arrive at the facility, he senses her and tries to break her out until thwarted by Laura, Dennis & Press. He escapes and makes it back to his shed. Patrick's father is waiting for him, telling him they can fix what is wrong with him, not knowing his real son was completely dead on the inside. What was left inside Patrick seems to agree after being asked to be fixed for his late mother's sake. But when his father embraces him to console him, the alien inside Patrick kills the Senator and proceeds to have his children go into their cocoons to rapidly become adults.

As Press, Laura and Gamble prepare to track Patrick, Eve breaks free from the lab and hurries to him. The team tails her and finds the shed and Patrick's brood, killing them with use of Gamble's DNA. Eve and Patrick start to have sex, first in human form, but then change into their alien forms. Press interrupts Eve and Patrick and Laura manages to convince Eve to help them. The alien-Patrick assaults Eve by what appears to be an alien form of fellatio in which he splits his head into two separate heads, bites Eve's arms, and forces a phallic shaped tentacle down her throat, rendering her unconscious. Press then stabs the alien-Patrick in the back with a pitchfork coated with Dennis' blood. This causes the alien-Patrick to severely weaken and disintegrate.

As the movie ends, Eve's now human body is loaded into the back of an ambulance. One of Patrick's children is also shown to be in the ambulance, along with a cat. The cat jumps on Eve's motionless body before her stomach starts to expand. This is the last shot of the movie.

Eve

Eve is the recreation of Sil from the first movie, played by Natasha Henstridge. Unlike her predecessor, Eve is portrayed as more human and driven by human emotions and motivations. She was a more of a tragic anti-heroine than a tragic villainess as Sil was in the first film. This is because although she is still very much alien, her alien genes have been suppressed and she is medicated to keep this in maintenance. She is able to learn extremely fast, just like Sil. But without proper life experience, all of her learning stimuli come from reading newspapers and watching television. Her favorite program is The Dukes Of Hazzard and she is able to learn to drive competently by watching the show. In the Species II novelization, it is hinted that she was also able to learn a degree of martial arts by watching old action movies. She is also very observant of the scientists and security personnel around her, able to learn how to use security equipment such as card scanners and passkey cards. It is only after she undergoes treatment to increase her alien genes that she goes from being fearful of humans to looking down on them. In the novel, Eve's body is able to adapt to any threat; during the scene where she is repeatedly shot by soldiers, in the novel, that experience allows her skin to become literally bulletproof.

When we last see her dead body in Species III, a government agent orders the autopsy technician to burn her body. However this is not seen on-screen. In the directors commentary, he mentions that it was deliberately kept this way in case she was brought back for a future movie.

The Species

The nature of the alien species is explored to a slightly greater extent in the second film. A professor claims that they originated in the Large Magellanic Cloud (called the Magellanic Galaxy), due to it apparently being the only other place carbon-based life forms have been discovered. It is also stipulated that they were a "cancerous" race that visited Mars millions of years ago and annihilated all life on its surface, (which was Earth-like at that time) before leaving a remnant of DNA in its soil. This DNA was intended to be picked up by other visitors so their species could continue to infect other planets in like manner. Since Patrick's alien form was quadrupedal (as opposed to bipedal, like Eve's form), bigger, and more 'brutish' in appearance than hers, it is assumed that this must be the common appearance of the males of the alien species. Their appearance is similar to the Xenomorphs of the Alien films; both were designed with input from H. R. Giger.

Cast

Reception

Unlike its predecessor, Species II was a box office flop. Critics, who almost universally panned the movie, pointed to the thin storyline, poor acting and gratuitous violence. Peter Medak highly praised the films' special effects and use of horror in his DVD commentary. He also thought audiences had too much expectation as this was a very different sequel due to not continuing from the story with the alien-infected rat that survived the finale, which hinted at a sequel in the 1995 original. Medak also admitted being uncomfortable with the amount of nudity in the film but said it was for the purpose of the story.

In an online interview with Metro in 2004, co-star Michael Madsen expressed his opinion on this film saying "Species 2 was a crock of s**t. There are a number I'm not very proud of. The movie studios can't mind that much, as they haven't contacted me to tell me off about it. I'm honest - if I've made a bad movie, I want my fans to know what they're letting themselves in for." This was questioned due to his honest opinion of each of his own movies, no matter if each gets a cult following, shown on his official website at the time, which has since been redesigned.

Despite the critism and financial failure, it later gained a cult following resulting in the later direct-to-video sequels.

Novelization

Like the first film, there was also a novelization based on the original screenplay which gives plot and character details not seen in the film. Some reviews tell of how the book gets across the tragedy of Eve's life and gives in depth character details. Eve's body adapts against any form of physical attack; this includes gas and eventually bullets - after Eve is shot by soldiers, her skin adapts, becoming bulletproof. She also has little knowledge of the outside world, so little that she actually doesn't know if Superman is a real life personality or not. Other details and scenes also appear in the book, such as Eve's first escape attempt and Patrick discovering new senses in a restaurant with his fiancé.

External links

References


 
 

 

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