New Resident Evil Trailer: Austin Abrams Battles Monsters in Fresh Adaptation

The trailer for the new Resident Evil movie has been released, directed by Zach Cregger. The film stars Austin Abrams as Bryan, a medical courier fighting for survival. This adaptation creates an original story rather than featuring established game characters. The movie will hit theaters on September 18.

Key Points: Resident Evil Trailer: Austin Abrams Fights for Survival

  • Trailer released for all-new Resident Evil movie
  • Directed by Zach Cregger
  • Stars Austin Abrams as Bryan, a medical courier
  • Film features original story, not established characters
  • Releases September 18 in theaters
2 min read

Resident Evil trailer: Austin Abrams fights to survive in this movie adaptation of horror video game

Watch the trailer for the new Resident Evil movie starring Austin Abrams. Directed by Zach Cregger, the film hits theaters September 18.

"Resident Evil follows Bryan (Austin Abrams), a medical courier who unwittingly finds himself in an action-packed, non-stop race for survival - Movie Synopsis"

Washington DC, April 30

The trailer of the all-new 'Resident Evil', based on the highly popular horror video game of the same name, is finally out. It is directed by 'Weapons' director Zach Cregger.

The movie does not feature established characters from the 'Resident Evil' universe, such as Leon S. Kennedy or Jill Valentine, as Cregger aims to create a new and original story. The film stars Austin Abrams in the lead role.

In an all-new story, "Resident Evil follows Bryan (Austin Abrams), a medical courier who unwittingly finds himself in an action-packed, non-stop race for survival as one fateful, horrifying night collapses around him in chaos," as quoted in the synopsis of the movie.

The trailer of the film shares a glimpse of Bryan countering the morphed monsters as he tries to flee a disaster-struck city.

Sony shared the trailer of the film on their Instagram.

According to Variety, the original 'Resident Evil' was released as a PlayStation game in 1994, but was later made available on several different consoles. There have been more than a dozen sequels and remakes of the games, including this year's 'Resident Evil Requiem.'

There have been six previous 'Resident Evil' films, beginning with Milla Jovovich and Michelle Rodriguez's 2002 film.

Jovovich went on to lead 'Resident Evil: Apocalypse' (2004), 'Resident Evil: Extinction' (2007), 'Resident Evil: Afterlife' (2010), 'Resident Evil: Retribution' (2012) and 'Resident Evil: The Final Chapter' (2017).

In 2021, filmmaker Johannes Roberts took on the franchise reboot 'Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City' as writer and director. The franchise has collectively grossed over 1.2 billion USD at the global box office, reported Variety.

The latest 'Resident Evil' film is produced and co-financed by Constantin Film. Robert Kulzer, Vertigo Entertainment's Roy Lee, Miri Yoon and PlayStation Productions are also producing.

Cregger's credits as a writer-director include 'Miss March,' 'The Civil War on Drugs' (both alongside Trevor Moore), 'Barbarian' and last year's 'Weapons.'

'Resident Evil' will hit theatres on September 18.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

J
James A
Austin Abrams is an interesting choice. He's got that "average joe" vibe that works for survival horror. I'm curious how they'll handle the monsters - the CGI in the trailer looked decent but let's hope the practical effects are good too.
N
Nisha Z
Honestly, I'm tired of reboots that ignore the source material. Raccoon City was a mess. Why not just adapt the first game properly? Also, where is the Indian connection? We have amazing horror elements in our folklore that Hollywood never taps into. 😤
R
Rahul R
The trailer gave me '28 Days Later' meets 'Train to Busan' vibes. Medical courier stuck in a zombie outbreak? That's a solid premise. I just hope they don't overdo the action and forget the survival horror aspect. September release - timing seems good for Dussehra weekend in India! 🎬
S
Siddhartha F
This might actually work. Cregger made 'Barbarian' which was genuinely tense and unpredictable. If he brings that same energy here, we could have something special. Just disappointed they moved away from the classic characters - that's like making an Indian mythological film without Rama or Krishna.

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