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Predator (film)
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Everything about Predator Film totally explained

Predator is a 1987 sci-fi, action, horror film directed by John McTiernan, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Carl Weathers, and Jesse Ventura. The story follows a Special Forces Unit who are on a mission to rescue hostages from a guerilla terrorist group in Central America. What they don't know is that they're the prey of an extraterrestrial lifeform.
   Reaction to the film was generally favorable, while the film itself grossed $60 million in the United States. The film has generated a sequel, Predator 2 (1990) and two crossover films, with the Alien franchise: Alien vs. Predator (2004) and (2007).

Overview

The Predator film utilizes the story of the hunter becoming the hunted, familiar from The Most Dangerous Game-inspired stories. The Predator is an alien humanoid with advanced technology and a penchant for hunting difficult game. With interstellar travel capability, multi-spectrum vision enhancement (although the film only shows him seeing the infrared), and a light-bending armor suit with equally advanced weaponry, the Predator is able to travel anywhere, hunt anything, and usually succeed. Much of the Predator's history and motivation are left open to the viewer, but after the success of this film, a franchise was created with a detailed back-story on the creature, complete with a battle-based society where young Predators are trained within a galaxy of fierce beasts documented in the third movie of the series, Alien vs. Predator (2004). Predator was the first of the film series, as the creature descends on Earth interested in hunting exotic game - in this case humans. Information released after the film reveals that the Predator scans the Earth's broadcast frequencies and chooses Central America as a location. A U.S. Special Forces unit is also en route to the same location, and during their operations stumble upon the Predator hunting humans. The military unit possesses significant firepower, which attracts the creature's attention as a more sporting target. During the film's final conflict, only one American is left and a cat and mouse game begins with each adversary hunting the other.

Plot

Opening with a mysterious spacecraft entering Earth's atmosphere, the film begins on the coast of Guatemala, where a U.S. Army Special Forces unit, led by Major Alan "Dutch" Schaefer (Arnold Schwarzenegger), is ordered to rescue a presidential cabinet minister kidnapped by guerrilla forces in Val Verde. Dutch's old Army buddy and now CIA agent, Major George Dillon (Carl Weathers), joins the team and they travel by helicopter to their destination within the jungle.
   Once inserted, the team find the remains of a downed helicopter and later the bodies of several men who have been skinned. They are identified to be another U.S. Special Forces unit, whose presence in the country mystifies Dutch. They soon make their way to a heavily defended rebel encampment and take out its inhabitants in short order, save for a girl named Anna (Elpidia Carrillo), whom they take prisoner. Dutch is enraged to discover that the rescue mission had been a set up to get him and his men to destroy the camp, after the previous team - the dead men they found earlier - disappeared in a failed rescue of several CIA agents belonging to Dillon. Dutch extracts this information from him, who confesses that he was using him all along.
   As the soldiers make their way to the extraction point, the men are observed from afar by an unknown creature, who uses infrared imaging to spy on them. Once members of the team are killed mysteriously, they become aware that something in the jungle is stalking them, whose presence is confirmed by eerie sightings of a cloaked figure. Anna delivers insight into the creature, who has apparently become a local legend for hunting humans as trophies. Despite attempts to track down the creature, the team is slowly killed off one by one, until only Dutch and Anna remain. Realizing that the creature kills only those possessing weapons, a wounded Dutch sends an unarmed Anna off to the extraction point. Dutch narrowly escapes the creature - revealed to be a masked, reptilian being - by unintentionally covering himself in mud, which hides his body's heat signature, rendering him invisible to the creature's thermal vision.
   Dutch decides to face off with the creature one last time, using the mud as camouflage and a number of improvised weapons and traps to kill it. The creature arrives as planned, but despite having its cloaking ability disabled in an attack, it manages to capture Dutch. Then, in a display of chivalry, the creature chooses to brawl its human prey to the death, unveiling his facade and discarding his electronic weaponry before brutalizing him. Once cornered, Dutch sets off one of his traps; a suspended log that falls and crushes the creature, mortally wounding it. As Dutch approaches the creature and asks him what he is, the creature mimics his question and then activates a time bomb on his wrist device. Dutch runs for cover as the creature self-destructs, and a massive explosion ignites the jungle. Anna and the rescue helicopter finally arrive to pick up a disheveled but victorious Dutch. Flying back to safety, he stares out at the jungle in mournful silence.

Production

Development

For a few months, following the release of Rocky IV, a joke was making the rounds in Hollywood. Since Rocky Balboa had run out of earthly opponents, he'd have to fight an alien if a fifth installment of his boxing series were to be made. Jim and John Thomas, a pair of screenwriters, took the joke very seriously and turned out a screenplay. The Thomas script for Predator was originally titled Hunter. It was picked up by Twentieth Century Fox in 1985, and turned over to producer Joel Silver who, based on his experience at the helm of Commando, seemed the right choice to turn the vintage sci-fi pulp storyline into a big-budget film. Silver enlisted his former boss Lawrence Gordon as co-producer and John McTiernan was hired as director - his first studio film.

Casting

Silver and Gordon first approached Arnold Schwarzenegger with the lead role.
To play the elite band of mercenaries, both Silver and Gordon, with co-producer John Davis, put out a casting net for other larger-than-life men of action. Carl Weathers, who had been memorable as boxer Apollo Creed in the Rocky films was their first choice to play Dillon, while professional wrestler and former Navy UDT Jesse Ventura was hired for his formidable physique as Blain. Native American Sonny Landham, Chicano Richard Chaves, and African-American Bill Duke, who co-starred alongside Schwarzenegger in Commando, provided the ethnic balance. As a favor to the writer of Joel Silver's blockbuster Lethal Weapon, the studio hired screenplay writer Shane Black not only to play a supporting role in the film, but also to keep an eye on McTiernan due to the director's inexperience. Van Damme was removed from the film and replaced by the late actor, and mime artist, Kevin Peter Hall.
   According to Schwarzenegger, filming was physically demanding as he'd to swim in very cold water and spent three weeks covered in mud for the climactic battle with the alien. In addition, cast and crew endured very cold temperatures in the Mexican jungle that required heat lamps to be on all of the time. Cast and crew filmed on rough terrain that, according to the actor, was never flat, "always on a hill. We stood all day long on a hill, one leg down, one leg up. It was terrible." For example, in the scene where the Predator chases Dutch, the water was foul, stagnant and full of leeches. The invisibility effect was achieved by having someone in a bright red suit (because it was the farthest opposite of the green of the jungle and the blue of the sky) the size of the Predator. The take was then repeated without the actors using a 30% wider lens on the camera. When the two takes were combined optically, a vague outline of the alien could be seen with the background scenery bending around its shape. Critical reaction to the film was generally favorable, with reviewers crediting McTiernan for its breathtaking pace and nonstop action and Schwarzenegger for delivering a fine performance. However, not everyone was able to follow the concept behind the movie. Roger Ebert, while giving it a positive review, still complained in his column for the Chicago Sun-Times that "the action moves so quickly that we overlook questions such as why would an alien species go to all the effort to send a creature to earth, just so that it could swing from the trees and skin American soldiers? Or, why would a creature so technologically advanced need to bother with hand-to-hand combat, when it could just zap Arnold with a ray gun." Dean Lamanna wrote in Cinefantastique that "the militarized monster movie tires under its own derivative weight." The film grossed nearly $100 million at the worldwide box office.
   In 2007, Entertainment Weekly named it the #22 greatest action movie of all time. The film scores a 77% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Themes

There are a number of parallels between the plot of Predator and the plot of the ancient Anglo Saxon poem Beowulf. In both stories, a group of elite foreign warriors arrive in an area suffering the depredations of a mysterious, almost invisible monster that has defeated native warriors on their own ground—in Beowulf, the great hall Heorot; in Predator, the jungle. The warriors' weapons and tactics prove ineffective against the monster, who is protected by near-invincibility (Grendel), and near perfect stealth (Predator). Picking off the warriors one by one, the monster takes, or returns to steal, the corpses of its victims, to keep as trophies.
   At one crucial point in the original script, the Predator flees the warriors after being wounded in the arm (in the final film, the monster has been wounded in the left thigh). In Beowulf the monster's arm is torn from his body by the hero, Beowulf. In both stories, the hero discards the potent weapons with which he's been equipped (firearms in Predator; the legendary sword Hrunting in Beowulf) when he realizes they're useless against the monster, and in the end he's protected by his own special armor (simple mud, in the Predator version). Ultimately, the hero uses ingenuity and cunning to protect himself and outwit the monster.

Related media

Predator has inspired a number of comic books, video games and popular anecdotes within the media. A range of Predator comics expanded the mythology, detailing encounters with the Alien creature at different points in history. is a third-person action-adventure video game released in 2005. Sci-Fi and cyberpunk writer John Shirley authored the Predator novel Forever Midnight in 2006 for DH Press. It fuses a futuristic interplanetary story with the Predator mythology. There is also a series of novels, comics, computer games and films connecting Predator with the Alien series titled Aliens vs. Predator. The video game Soldat also draws heavily from Predator.

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