Director: Dan Trachtenberg (Prey)
Starring: Amber Midthunder, Boyd Holbrook, Cailee Spaeny, surprise franchise legend
Genre: Sci-Fi/Horror/Action
Runtime: 114 minutes
Rating: ★★★½☆ (3.5/5 – “Messy, brutal, and exactly what fans want”)
The Bloody, Bombastic Return of Cinema’s Deadliest Feud
After nearly two decades of misfires (AVP: Requiem, anyone?), Alien vs. Predator 3 (2025) finally delivers the brutal, high-stakes showdown fans have been craving. Directed by Prey’s Dan Trachtenberg, this installment ditches the PG-13 constraints and Earth-based silliness of the previous films, opting instead for a claustrophobic, R-rated nightmare on a derelict deep-space colony. The result? A vicious, visually stunning brawl that honors both franchises—even if it doesn’t quite surpass them.
Plot Summary (Spoiler-Free)
Set in 2197, AVP 3 follows Lt. Kara Voss (Amber Midthunder), a Colonial Marine stationed on the remote mining outpost Hadley’s Hope II (yes, that’s intentional). When a distress signal leads her team to a nearby derelict ship, they discover evidence of a Predator hunt gone wrong—and a hive of Xenomorphs growing unchecked.
Enter The Hunter (Boyd Holbrook), a rogue Yautja exiled for breaking the sacred hunting code, who crash-lands on the station with one goal: wipe out the Xenomorph infestation at any cost. But when a corporate bio-weapons team (led by Cailee Spaeny’s ice-cold executive) tries to capture both species for profit, all hell breaks loose—literally.
Cue facehuggers vs. plasma casters, chestbursting ambushes, and a third-act showdown so gloriously over-the-top it makes AVP: Requiem look like a Disney movie.
What Works
✅ Trachtenberg’s Gritty, Atmospheric Direction
Gone are the dimly lit, shaky-cam fights of Requiem. Trachtenberg frames the action with precision, letting us see the horror—whether it’s a Predator silently stalking through steam-filled corridors or a Xenomorph lunging from the shadows. The tension is Palpatine-level high.
✅ Amber Midthunder as the New Ripley
Following Prey’s success, Midthunder proves she’s the perfect heir to the Alien franchise’s “final girl” throne. Her Voss is smart, resourceful, and believably badass—no Mary Sue nonsense here.
✅ Boyd Holbrook’s Tragic Predator
Holbrook’s Hunter is a fascinating twist: a disgraced Yautja with a code of honor, forced to ally with humans. His dynamic with Midthunder is the film’s emotional core.
✅ The Gore (Oh, the Gore!)
This is the hard-R AVP fans begged for. Acid blood melts faces. Spine-rippings happen in full daylight. A Xenomorph-Predator hybrid (briefly) appears. It’s glorious.
✅ The Franchise Deep Cuts
From Weyland-Yutai logs teasing the Alien timeline to a certain iconic character’s surprise return (no spoilers, but get hyped), the fan service is chef’s kiss.
What Doesn’t Work
❌ The Human Villains Are Forgettable
Spaeny’s corporate baddie feels like a watered-down Burke (Aliens), and her team exists solely to die gruesomely.
❌ The Hybrid Tease Goes Nowhere
A mid-credits scene hints at a Predalien-level abomination, but it’s wasted—likely saved for a sequel.
❌ The Ending Feels Rushed
The final battle is epic, but the resolution is abrupt, leaving key threads dangling.
Final Verdict: The AVP Movie We Deserve
Alien vs. Predator 3 isn’t high art—but it’s exactly what this crossover needed: a vicious, no-holds-barred grudge match with heart, horror, and hellish spectacle. It won’t dethrone Aliens or Predator 2, but it’s the best AVP film yet.
Rating: ★★★½☆ (3.5/5) – “A bloody love letter to fans.”
Worth seeing? If you’ve ever wanted to see a Xenomorph get decapitated by a smart disc, hell yes.
“Game over, man. Game over.” – Some Colonial Marine, probably
Verdict: Should the franchise keep going, or is this the perfect sendoff? Sound off in the comments!