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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Wendy Ide

Prey review – stylish Predator prequel rooted in Native American history

Amber Midthunder in Prey.
‘Formidable’: Amber Midthunder in Prey. Photograph: 20th Century Studios

The word “prequel” makes my heart sink. So often it’s just a cynical means to squeeze a little more juice out of an already dead and desiccated franchise, or a reboot that paints a layer of self-referential irony over a much-loved original. But Prey is different. Directed by Dan Trachtenberg (10 Cloverfield Lane), it’s a prequel to the Predator series that stays true to the essence of the original – stylishly violent, stickily graphic, impossibly tense – while also working satisfyingly as a self-contained entity.

The setting is the land of the Comanche nation, 300 years ago; the central character is Naru (the formidable Amber Midthunder), a warrior and expert tracker whose skills have been honed by a lifetime of close combat against the forces of the patriarchy. But ingrained sexism works in her favour: the assumption that as a woman she’s not a credible threat turns out to be her secret weapon. That and her self-invented elasticated axe device – think a murderous version of paddle ball.

There’s a feral majesty to the backdrop, which, with its wolves and pines and violent sunsets, looks like something that might have been airbrushed on to the side of a customised van – until it all gets covered in the blood and body parts of roughneck European settlers.

  • Prey is available on Hulu in the US and Disney+ elsewhere

Watch a trailer for Prey.
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