There's an exciting discussion of 2018 & # 39; s Book Club departure Wrap ideas that talks about how a movie producer can even make a profit if viewers don't like their movie. Destruction: Extermination looks like one of those cases.
The Doom series of games itself always dove into its own myths built around the image of Satan and endless violence, focusing on entertaining and reinforcing the dimensions of the story or story. This is not a bad place to start a horror movie, though Doom: Destruction, which recently appeared on Netflix,
It is not enough for a Doom movie to bring blood and monsters, it should mimic games by holding your head under shock for so long that you feel like yourself do you have to fight to get some air. Also Destruction: Extermination it does not rise above the motto.
The greatest sin Destruction: Extermination, who is restarting the franchise after The Rock released it in 2005, that it's not fun to watch. Violence does not have too much violence, and every player pretends to be present at that agreed time in the agreement, not for long. Everything is brightly lit, even the "scary" scenes, and it's all shot in such a natural light that each set ends up looking like it came from a blood-soaked opera. It's not even the standard version of Doom, the hidden version of James Cameron The aliens
Past The judgment the film may have strayed far from the source material, but The Rock remains a special campy success, and the expanded first-person sequences at least attempted to duplicate the power of the gonzo gaming that made me love this world to begin with. Destruction
I got paid to watch a movie, which I didn't pay for, on Netflix. And I hope the people who are on screen, or behind the camera, get paid to do it. Watching a damned thing really sounded like a chore, and judging by the tired, diminished action in the movie, and making it may just be boring.
Destruction: Extermination is available on Netflix now.