NEMESIS 3: TIME LAPSE aka NEMESIS 3: PREY HARDER
USA. 1995. Director/Screenplay - Albert Pyun, Producers - Tom Karnowski & Gary Schmoeller, Photography - George Mooradian, Music - Tony Riparetti, Visual Effects - Stargate Films Inc, Special Effects - Guy Faria, Nebula and Makeup Effects - David Barton, Makeup Effects - Maurine Schlenz, Art Direction - Rob Bowen & Tracy Hennigan. Production Company - Imperial Entertainment/Filmwerks/Toga Productions. Sue Price (Alex), Tim Thomerson (Farnsworth 2), Norbert Weisser (Edson), Xavier Declie (Johnny), Sharon Bruneau (Lock), Debbie Muggli (Ditko), Ursula Sarclev (Ramie), Earl White (Brick), Karen Studer (Zema)
Plot: Alex comes around in the desert with amnesia. Aided by Farnsworth 2, who unaware to her is an illusion- projecting cyborg bounty hunter, she tries to piece her memories together. Gradually she begins to remember her flight from other killer cyborgs and her bid to rescue her sister who has returned through time to bring her back to the future.
‘Nemesis 2: Nebula' (1995) was almost entirely unrelated to the first `Nemesis' (1993) other than the basic theme of both featuring cyborgs/androids trying to overthrow humanity. `Nemesis 3' however directly follows on from `Nemesis 2' - the two can be run together without a break. Indeed both films appear to have been filmed back-to-back - they both share virtually the same credits and some actors are credited as being in both films despite having appeared only in one.
`Nemesis 2' had almost nothing in the way of plot but nevertheless proved quite an efficient sf/action vehicle by virtue of keeping its action moving the entire time. To its credit `Nemesis 3' at least tries to be something a little different and take the emphasis away from action. There is some (but not much) attempt at developing more plot. Unfortunately in the absence of action there isn't too much else to give the film any drive. In a rather unwieldly dramatic structure the latter half of the film becomes an entire flashback as Price regains her memory - and eventually turns into an sf-action chase film all over again. Only this time it's not quite as effective as its predecessor - a car chase at the climax with digitally blurred dune buggies doesn't work and the ending comes annoyingly abruptly as the film sets itself up for the next sequel, ‘Nemesis 4: Death Angel'.
On the film's plus side it has some moments of immense strangeness. There's an intensely weird opening section with heroine Sue Price waking up with complete amnesia and Tim Thomerson turning up as a mercenary who, unseen to her, keeps unnervingly slipping back and forward between human and a gleaming metal robot skeleton and scanning her with glowing green eyes while she is unconscious. One of the more bizarrely entertaining elements are two female cyborg mercenaries played by Sharon Bruneau and Debbie Muggli who strut through the film like android drag queens, making sardonic asides about how the sand is playing hell with their circuits and turning to each other and laughing maniacally every time they kill someone.
Copyright 1998 Richard Scheib
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