Xtro 3: Watch the Skies explained

Xtro 3: Watch the Skies
Director:Harry Bromley Davenport
Producer:Harry Bromley Davenport
Jamie Beardsley
Starring:Sal Landi
Andrew Divoff
Karen Moncrieff
Jim Hanks
Music:Harry Bromley Davenport
Distributor:Image Entertainment (DVD) (US)
Runtime:90 min.
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Xtro 3: Watch the Skies (sometimes credited as Xtro: Watch the Skies) is a 1995 science-fiction horror thriller film directed by Harry Bromley Davenport and starring Sal Landi, Andrew Divoff, Karen Moncrieff and Jim Hanks. It is the third film in the low-budget British science fiction/horror Xtro series.

Plot

In a rundown motel, Lieutenant Martin Kirn (Sal Landi) meets with a reporter to tell what happened on his final military mission.

Since at least World War II, the United States government has successfully covered up very real proof of U.F.O.s. However, when a group of U.S. Marines is dispatched to a deserted island to defuse an old ordinance. The military task force is not made-up of elite military units.

Kim learns that Captain Fetterman (Andrew Divoff) chose the soldiers for the mission as they are expendable. Despite their inadequacies, they soon suspect something is amiss about the mission. They uncover unsettling evidence, old films documenting brutal medical experiments on aliens, and find one person living on the island who Fetterman wants dead.

They then discover a lone surviving alien out for revenge, and a military intelligence plot to sacrifice them and conceal existence of the encounter. The military is concerned the shroud of mystery is about to be lifted and decide to abandon the Marines.[1] The lone person living on the island had conducted experiments on the alien before the alien had escaped.[2]

Cast

Production

The film was shot in British Columbia.

Director Harry Bromley's first film in America. The movie has no direct links to the first two films[3]

Reception

Creature Feature gave the film 3 out of 5 stars, finding that film has moments of inspiration, but finding a problem with the ending.[4] Monster Hunter found the movie smart in theory but lacking in execution. In addition, it noted the film could be brutal.[5] Letterbox DVD gave the film 3.5 stars out of 5, noting that while it had a low budget, and borrows some from the movie Predator (film), that there are enough original ideas to make the film worthwhile.[6]

Home media

The film has been released on DVD twice. The first DVD was released in 1999 by Image Entertainment, who coincidentally, would release the first two entries in the Xtro series on DVD years later. In 2005, the film was released yet again on DVD by Showcase Entertainment.[7] Both DVDs are now discontinued.

In 2020, Xtro 3 was released on Blu-ray by Vinegar Syndrome. Extras include new interviews with director Harry Bromley Davenport and screenwriter Daryl Haney.

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Xtro 3: Watch the Skies .
  2. Web site: [Blu-ray Review] 'Xtro 3: Watch the Skies' is Low-Budget Sci-fi Fun from the '90s . 3 April 2020 .
  3. Web site: Blu-ray Review: Xtro 3: Watch the Skies | Inside Pulse . 5 March 2020 .
  4. Stanly, J. (2000) Creature Feature: 3rd Edition
  5. Web site: Xtro 3: Watch the Skies (1995) . 29 October 2017 .
  6. Web site: A ★★★½ review of Xtro 3: Watch the Skies (1995) .
  7. Web site: XTRO: Watch the Skies (1995) - Harry Bromley Davenport. AllMovie.com. AllMovie. 5 May 2016.