Resident Evil- Welcome To Raccoon City -
The highlight? The Licker.
If you want a perfect action movie, look elsewhere. If you want to feel the cold rain of Raccoon City, hear the moan of the undead, and relive the panic of hearing a door crash open behind you—welcome home. Resident Evil- Welcome to Raccoon City
The production design is immaculate. The Raccoon City Police Department (RPD) is the star of the film—a cavernous, gothic nightmare of marble floors, red carpets, and looming statues. It perfectly replicates the claustrophobic camera angles of the original 1996 game, albeit flattened into a filmic widescreen. You feel the cold draft through the broken windows. You hear the echo of every footstep. It is the first film in the franchise to truly understand that space is the primary antagonist of Resident Evil . The mansion, the orphanage, the streets—everything is a maze designed to trap you. Perhaps the most controversial decision Roberts made was to merge the narratives of the first two games: Resident Evil (1996) and its superior sequel, Resident Evil 2 (1998). Canonically, the Spencer Mansion incident (featuring S.T.A.R.S. members Chris Redfield, Jill Valentine, and Albert Wesker) occurs on July 24th, while the city-wide outbreak (featuring Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield) occurs on September 29th. Welcome to Raccoon City smashes these timelines together into a single, chaotic 107-minute blitz. The highlight
The film is drenched in dark, atmospheric dread, but it is also punctuated by moments of absurd comedy. A recurring gag involves Leon eating a gas station hot dog that gets progressively more contaminated. Another scene has a character trying to push a heavy bookshelf over a window while a zombie moans politely outside. If you want to feel the cold rain
Furthermore, the budget constraints are visible. The city-wide outbreak feels small. We see maybe two blocks of Raccoon City. The Orphanage (a deep pull from Resident Evil 2 ) is utilized well, but the climactic train escape lacks the scale of "a city of 100,000 dying." Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is not a masterpiece. It is a rough, jagged, lovingly crafted piece of fan-service that sometimes trips over its own ambition. It lacks the slick polish of the Resident Evil remakes and the blockbuster budget of the Anderson films.
Flawed, frantic, and faithful. Welcome to Raccoon City is the horror movie the fans deserved, even if they had to survive a few narrative lickers to get there.
During a tense sequence in the RPD corridors, the film delivers a masterclass in suspense. The Licker is introduced slowly: first the sound of claws on the ceiling, then a glimpse of a brain, then the full, terrifying creature. It moves with a jerky, unnatural speed that feels lifted directly from the 1998 cutscenes.