Species III
Species III | |
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Based on | Characters by Dennis Feldman |
Written by | Ben Ripley |
Directed by | Brad Turner |
Starring | |
Music by | Elia Cmiral |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producer | Frank Mancuso Jr. |
Producer | David Dwiggins |
Cinematography | James Coblentz |
Editor | Christian Sebaldt |
Running time | 112 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Syfy |
Release | November 27, 2004 |
Related | |
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Species III is a 2004 science fiction action thriller television film. The film is a sequel to Species II (1998) and the third installment of the Species series. Directed by Brad Turner and stars Robin Dunne, Robert Knepper, Sunny Mabrey, Amelia Cooke and John Paul Pitoc. Natasha Henstridge, who was contracted to a trilogy commencing with the first Species film, briefly reprises the role of Eve in the opening scene.
The film premiered on the American channel Syfy on November 27, 2004, and released on DVD on December 7, in both a standard and an unrated version. The film was shot in HD video.
Plot
[edit]The ambulance transporting Eve's corpse gets lost.[a] However, when the co-driver tries to radio their superiors, the driver, Dr. Bruce Abbot, stops and holds him at gunpoint. They are ambushed by Portus, who kills the co-driver with his tongue. Abbot discovers Portus and Eve alive in the back of the ambulance; Portus strangles Eve to death while she gives birth to a newborn alien, which Abbot flees with. Government agent Wasach orders an autopsy, discovering Eve's pregnancy, then orders the burning of her body.
Abbot returns to his usual job teaching biochemistry at a university. He also raises Eve's child, who grows into a young girl; Abbot names her Sara. One night, Portus, who has dramatically aged and is critically ill, visits Abbot's office. Abbot tries to treat Portus, who demands to see Sara and reveals that there are other half-breeds suffering from similar illnesses. He soon dies while sitting in the chair. Meanwhile, one of Abbot's students is called Dean, and his funding for an experimental power plant project is in jeopardy. Abbot asks for Dean's aid in perfecting the alien DNA to save the species. In return, Abbot promises Dean a share of any funding or awards their work receives.
In Abbot's absence, Sara pupates inside a cocoon and emerges as an adult. Abbot's superior, Dr. Nicholas Turner, arrives at the house seeking Abbot and comes across Sara. She initially tries to seduce Turner but then rejects him. He attempts to rape Sara, who kills him and leaves to seek a mate. Abbot returns home, sees evidence of Sara's transformation and disposes of Turner's body. Sara eventually connects with another half-breed, but discovers his illnesses and knocks his tooth out. Abbot and Dean later continue their experiments on Sara. Abbot informs Dean of the government's "Project Athena", which previously created Sil,[b] and Sara's heritage as the child of Patrick Ross infected with alien DNA from Mars and Eve, Sil's clone. The half-breed that Sara rejected breaks into the lab, mortally wounds Abbot and attempts to impregnate Sara, but is killed by hydrochloric gas Abbot sprays over the lab. Dean ponders whether to continue Abbot's work until Sara urges him to save her species.
Dean's roommate at the university, Hastings, discovers a website posted by Amelia, a woman who wants to date biochemists. After snooping through Dean's notes, he forwards them to Amelia, who agrees to meet him. En route, Amelia - who is another half-breed - has sex with and murders a gas station attendant who attempts to rape her. At the campus, she senses Sara and kidnaps Hastings, taking him to Abbot's home. Amelia and Sara force Hastings to work on perfecting the alien DNA using Sara's purer biology to save the half-breeds and create perfect mating partners for them. Wasach, whose team also monitored Amelia's website and discovered its connection to Project Athena, picks up Dean and helps him save Hastings.
Dean, Hastings, and Wasach flee to Dean's experimental power plant with Sara and Amelia in pursuit. While attempting to keep Sara's harvested eggs away from them, the three decide to try trapping Amelia and Sara in the plant's core, but this tactic risks causing a catastrophic meltdown. Dean drops the eggs into the core, prompting Amelia to attempt to kill him. Sara then attacks and throws Amelia into the core as well. Dean, Hastings, and Wasach close the core in time to prevent a meltdown.
Later, Hastings visits Dean at Abbot's home and discovers both Sara and a half-breed alien boy. Dean reveals that he pulled Sara to safety before sealing the plant's core, then completed the refined alien DNA to create a mate for her so she would not be alone. After the boy is grown, Dean tells Sara that she is on her own and to be careful. Before Sara and her mate leave, Dean asks why she saved him from Amelia. She, however, does not answer. Dean then reassures the nervous Hastings by revealing that he ensured that Sara's mate would be sterile, preventing them from reproducing.
Cast
[edit]- Robin Dunne as Dean
- Robert Knepper as Dr. Bruce Abbot
- Sunny Mabrey as Sara
- Savanna Fields as Young Sara
- Amelia Cooke as Amelia
- John Paul Pitoc as Hastings
- Michael Warren as Agent Wasach
- Christopher Neame as Dr. Nicholas Turner
- Patricia Bethune as Colleen
- Joel Stoffer as Portus
- Christopher R. Gillum as Young Portus
- James Leo Ryan as Yosef
- Reed Frerichs as ISD Staffer
- Marc D. Wilson as Crew Chief
- Matthew Yang King as Specialist Robert Kelley
- Jason Sarcinelli as Adult Male Alien
- Natasha Henstridge as Eve
Production
[edit]Executive producer Frank Mancuso Jr., who also worked on the previous Species films, wanted the sequel to be aimed more at young adults, so the characters were written to be younger than what was originally planned. They decided to cast Sunny Mabrey as the main blonde alien. Amelia Cooke was also taken for the role. Also, Mancuso wanted the creatures to look slightly different from H.R. Giger's original concept. The alien species was then redesigned by Rob Hinderstien.
Reception
[edit]Species III received mostly negative reviews, holding a 17% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on six reviews.[1] DVD Talk negatively reviewed the film saying "this film is underdeveloped with an absurd plot and bad special effects, this film just reuses old ideas and is not worth your time, it is a pointless sequel that lacks an effective story to make it a watchable film, it is just camouflaged by nudity".[2] Den of Geek! said: "If you are going to start watching this franchise, you should give this one a miss and cut straight to the final film".[3]
Sequel
[edit]A fourth film, Species: The Awakening, was released straight-to-television in 2007. While it does continue the Species series, it was a standalone film, not a direct follow-up to Species III.
Notes
[edit]- ^ This story takes place hours after the events of the previous film.
- ^ As depicted in the first film.
References
[edit]- ^ "Species III - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 19, 2013.
- ^ "DVDTalk". Retrieved May 4, 2014.
- ^ "Revisiting Species: Species III". 6 August 2009. Retrieved May 15, 2017.
External links
[edit]- Species III at IMDb
- 2004 science fiction films
- American action thriller films
- 2000s English-language films
- Films directed by Brad Turner
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Species (film series)
- Films about rape in the United States
- Films set in 1998
- Films set in the 1990s
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Television sequel films
- Syfy original films
- 2000s monster movies
- Films scored by Elia Cmíral
- Films set in universities and colleges
- American horror television films
- American pregnancy films
- 2004 films
- 2000s pregnancy films
- 2000s American films
- English-language science fiction horror films