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Species 3 [DVD]

3.5 out of 5 stars 14 customer reviews

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Dispatched from and sold by i want one of those.
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Frequently Bought Together

  • Species 3 [DVD]
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  • Species 4: The Awakening [DVD]
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  • Species 2 [DVD] [1998]
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Product details

  • Actors: Sunny Maybrey, Robin Dunne, Robert Knepper, Amelia Cooke, John Paul Pitoc
  • Directors: Brad Turner
  • Producers: David Dwiggins
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Twentieth Century Fox
  • DVD Release Date: 10 Oct. 2007
  • Run Time: 111 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001NDTA4U
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 67,904 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Mankind's number is up in this thrilling third installment of the Species franchise. Featuring eye-popping special effects, knuckle-whitening suspense and the dazzling performance of sexy newcomer Sunny Mabrey, Species III is the most jarring, action-packed chapter in the sci-fi series yet. In the ongoing fight for supremacy between mankind and human-alien hybrids, a fatal hybrid weakness has given humans the advantage. Until now. When Sara (Mabrey), the daughter of Eve (Natasha Henstridge), is born, she develops into the most genetically perfect alien form yet. Seeking to repopulate the earth with her kind, this dangerously beautiful femme fatale heeds an overwhelming drive to mate while a crack military team trails her in an attempt to end the war between the two species forever.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By EA Solinas HALL OF FAMETOP 500 REVIEWER on 24 Feb. 2014
"Species" was decent. "Species II" was subpar, but did have some interesting moments.

But what about "Species III," a much cheaper direct-to-DVD with almost none of the previous cast? Well, it's pretty much a dog -- it's on par with one of the higher-quality SyFy TV movies, with a lot of naked girls and panicked geneticists running around. And the required blonde alien-hybrid has absolutely no redeeming characteristics -- she's just cold and nasty.

The story picks up roughly where "Species II" left off: A medical van carrying Eve's (Natasha Henstridge) body is suddenly attacked by a half-breed alien boy. Eve suddenly comes back to life, and immediately gives birth to a baby girl -- only to be killed by the half-breed. Before the kid can attack the baby, Dr. Abbot (Robert Knepper) runs off into the woods with her.

Yes, Natasha Henstridge is only in the movie for about three minutes, and she doesn't even have a line. Apparently this was just to fulfill her three-movie contract.

Dr. Abbot secretly raises the girl, whom he names Sara -- and after only a few days, she matures into a beautiful woman (Sunny Mabrey) who promptly starts looking for a mate. But she rejects all the humans because they have genetic flaws -- and it turns out that her half-breed half-siblings are all dying from compromised immune systems.

So Abbot enlists a grad student, Dean (Robin Dunne), to help him create a pure, disease-free strain of the "species"... not realizing that the half-breeds are closing in on Sara, who may be their only hope. Oh, and the government is also searching for Sara, but they're apparently too stupid to actually CHECK on the home of a missing man who vanished at the same time as an alien baby.
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Start with the positives, what gets it those two stars? The first half shows promise but the second half is a complete mess. Some of the performances are pretty good, a very good performance from Robert Knepper as Dr Abbot who is our initial protagonist before the terrible Robin Dunne becomes chief protagonist and ruins everything. Knepper gives his character huge depth and conveys that although his character does bad things it is because he genuinely believes he is doing the best thing in the situation, a trait a lot of 'mad scientists' have but Robert Knepper makes it believable and engaging. Amelia Cooke as a second sexy alien turns in a strong performance that ticks all the boxes in her small but memorable role. Special effects are good, the deaths are gory, the alien forms are ok but not great, a dying half breed alien is gross but very well constructed. Highlight is when a cocoon containing a 8 year old alien girl bursts open released the fully formed, slimy, nude main alien played by Sunny Mabrey. This special effect is very good and you woudn't expect something of such high quality in a straight to DVD film.
This is a Species film so of course the most important character is our sexy, evil alien woman. Sunny gives off the naivety of the character experiencing the world for the first time with wide eyes very well but she is a bit too soft and warm to pull off the sexual predator aspects of the character. This is maybe more of a problem with the character as written than with the performance however it's a vital part of the character and this means that she is the weakest female alien in the franchise so far.
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Its 6 years later and they made another one! This is the first direct to video species sequel, slightly lower budget this time and a change of cast, not as good as the original 2 but still great fun, we get a good open sequence that continues not long after the second movie, We get a cameo from Natasha Henstridge playing her Eve character giving birth to a new strain of alien before leaving the franchise, we then get introduced to the younger replacement Sunny Mabrey (XXX-2, Snakes on a plane) a hot blonde with a killer body, and plentiful nudity there is too! once she turns adult the alien urges come out, can she be controlled or will she want to destroy humanity like her mother, for a lower budget sequel it still really is rather enjoyable and well paced with some new ideas, the effects are not too bad, some cool gore in places, if your a hard-core fan of the series you will probably enjoy it, not as much as the originals but worth a watch.

DVD is pretty decent quality.
Features include some short behind the scenes segments totalling around 30-mins, audio commentary and trailer.
Region 2, 1hr-47mins, 2004.
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**sighs** See, this was quite a good idea on paper.

An alen civilisation transmits their DNA code to Earth when stupid humans mix it with their own genetic material to unwittingly create a super killing machine.

So why spoil it with unnecessary splot devices? "We're on a super-secret military mission to transport this dead alien... what do you mean the driver is a non-security cleared reservist who just happens to be the local college genetics professor? Oh, look - he stole the body."

This is just one of dozens of stupid moments that made me think that if humans really were this stupid, then they deserve to be exterminated. Now that said, there are some really good concepts here - aliens being fatally allergic to pollen; notions of whether we can control our own impulse to procreate... It is better than Species 2, but not by much.
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