Is resident evil: welcome to raccoon city connected to the other movies

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City, a franchise reboot from director Johannes Roberts, has a clear aim of providing fanservice to longtime players of the hit video game series published by Capcom. The film borrows heavily from the original video games by Capcom, especially Resident Evil (1996) and Resident Evil 2(1998). One particular character also originates from Resident Evil (2002), a remake of the original game that first appeared exclusively on the Nintendo Gamecube.

Welcome to Raccoon City's backdrop and timeline are heavily reminiscent of events and locations from the games, but don't follow the events beat-for-beat. Instead, the film borrows significant events from the first two games chronologically but places them on a concurrent timeline, allowing the Mansion Incident of the original Resident Evil to play out at the same time as the Raccoon City Outbreak of Resident Evil 2 and 3.

resident-evil-welcome-to-raccoon-city-leon-kennedy-claire-redfield-social-featuredImage via Sony Pictures

The film's narrative shifts between S.T.A.R.S. Alpha Team as they investigate the lost contact of Bravo Team at the Spencer Mansion, and Claire Redfield (Kaya Scodelario) and Leon S. Kennedy's (Avan Jogia) view of the unraveling situation in Raccoon City and its police station. These events occur simultaneously over the course of a single night, although in the video games they were separate incidents that occurred months apart within the official game timeline. However, given the rapid nature of the spread of the deadly T-Virus in the games, it's a feasible move to bring the two major events together in the interest of telling a story that fits within a film's runtime. Fans of the games will recognize key moments, such as the doomed long-haul trucker crashing his tanker right in front of the Raccoon City police station and the S.T.A.R.S. helicopter being brought down in the woods outside of town, but they've been shuffled around into a slightly new order of events that better serves the film's merged storylines. Much of the backstory and subplots of the original trilogy of video games have also been condensed and shifted around to coincide with the events that are depicted in the movie, such the story of the tragic Lisa Trevor, a fan-favorite enemy from the games.

Welcome to Raccoon City takes place in the year 1998, just like the original trilogy of video games. This stands in fairly stark contrast to the Resident Evil titles headed by Paul W.S. Anderson, which all took place in a contemporary setting full of cutting edge technology. In the first of those films, artificial intelligence and body-slicing laser traps are featured, making it clear that Anderson's take on the game franchise was more of a "near future" take than the source material it was adapting. Keeping in line with the year, Welcome to Raccoon City keeps its universe grounded in the late 90s. Consequently, none of the working class characters in the film have a cell phone, and the internet is essentially nonexistent, which adds to Raccoon City's isolation.

Chris, Joseph, Jill, and Wesker
holding guns in the forest in Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon CityImage via Sony Pictures

Where Capcom created a short gap between the two most major incidents in the early Resident Evil timeline, Welcome to Raccoon City brings all of the survival horror danger together to culminate in one terrible night in 1998. You have to feel for the film's characters, who experience two games' worth of hell breaking loose over the course of an especially bad 12 hours. That's "wrong place, wrong time" taken to the extreme.

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Netflix will soon debut a Resident Evil TV show, but is this new project a sequel or otherwise related to the Welcome to Raccoon City movie?

Netflixs Resident Evil A Sequel To Welcome To Raccoon City

A new Resident Evil TV show is on its way to Netflix streaming, following the 2021 release of movie Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City. As with any new Resident Evil movie or TV project, there is a certain amount of audience anticipation going into the show's release, along with some semblance of trepidation. Resident Evil's history being adapted into the live-action realm has been hit and miss so far, with many items proving to be highly divisive.

One point in the Netflix Resident Evil show's favor is its lead creative mind Andrew Dabb, who has shown he can excel in the world of horror TV. Dabb served as showrunner for seasons 12-15 of CW hit Supernatural, after having worked on its creative staff since season 5. That kind of experience is great to have when setting out to add an entry into the sprawling Resident Evil franchise, one which encompasses movies, shows, books, comics, and of course, video games.

Considering how recently Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City released, it's only natural that many potential viewers of the Resident Evil TV show are wondering if it's a sequel to that movie. However, the answer is a firm no. Welcome to Raccoon City and the Netflix Resident Evil show were produced by two entirely separate teams, and aren't connected in any intentional way. Considering that the Netflix show is set decades after the 1998 T-Virus outbreak in Raccoon City though, it's certainly possible similar events from the games that Welcome to Raccoon City was inspired by will be referenced or explored.

Resident Evil Netflix Can Get Live Action Wesker Right With Lance Reddick

According to showrunner Dabb, the Netflix Resident Evil series treats all mainline Resident Evil game canon up through Resident Evil: Village as having happened, so presumably any part of that could be referenced or incorporated in some way. Considering that Welcome to Raccoon City, despite hewing much closer to the games than the Milla Jovovich movie franchise, took many liberties with the timeline, it's probably a much simpler move to not worry about functioning as a follow-up. As mentioned though, since both had different producing teams, acknowledging each other may not have even been an option.

While it remains to be seen how Netflix's Resident Evil show will be received, it's probably a good thing either way that it doesn't directly tie to Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City's ending. Not only did that movie get blasted by critics - 31% on Rotten Tomatoes - it sank like a stone at the box office, earning $41 million worldwide on a budget of $25 million. That might sound like a good return on the surface, but after marketing costs, it likely barely broke even, much less turned a profit. With this in mind, tying a new Netflix show to Welcome to Raccoon City's sunken ship would have been a mistake.

More: Netflix's Resident Evil Can Get Live-Action Wesker Right With Lance Reddick

Is Resident Evil Welcome to Raccoon City a continuation?

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is a 2021 action horror film written and directed by Johannes Roberts. Adapted from the stories of the first and second games by Capcom, it serves as a reboot of the Resident Evil film series and is the seventh live-action film based on the video game series.

Do I have to watch all Resident Evil movies before Raccoon City?

Directed by Johannes Roberts, Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is a reboot of the franchise and requires no prior knowledge of the movies. Along with the new director comes a new cast and a story that more closely follows the events of the first two Resident Evil games.

Is Resident Evil connected to the movies?

So, even though Netflix's Resident Evil doesn't deal directly with the events of the main line of games, the series confirms most of what happened in the original trilogy is true in this universe.

Is the new Resident Evil connected to the old movies?

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City (2021) In December 2018, Johannes Roberts was hired as writer and director. Roberts stated that his film will be separate from the previous films in the series, with the story being based on Resident Evil and Resident Evil 2.