

For those concerned with the realÑthough unspokenÑissues, Bergman does remain fully-clothed throughout (though she does have a pool scene early on). I suppose there is some immediate degree of humor in connecting the well-endowed Bergman and implants, and sure enough the script tosses out a couple of fairly funny one-liners on the subject. Monica Bonds, who is some sort of dolphin expert that has perfected the aforementioned GPS/video/audio implants.

One of the heroes in this mess is former Playboy Playmate Jaime Bergman as Dr. The escape prompts a slight change in locale for the money hungry Broddick, but the hunt is still on unbeknownst to them, however, the FBI has brought in their own 80-foot scarlet queen boaÑequipped with a GPS and video/audio feed implantsÑto track down the rogue reptile. In what is becoming a trend ( Freddy vs Jason, Alien vs Predator), apparently the filmmakers thought a big boa versus a big python would have the same cachet, not realizing that the title sounds like a Discovery Channel documentary.Ī loose, loose sequel of sorts to fragments of Python and Boa (so loose it barely merits a mention), the story here is built around an 80-foot python that escapes from its high-tech cage while being transported to oily tycoon Broddick (Adam Kendrick), who intends on using the snake to lure a group of wealthy hunters to a private range to hunt it. That's a bad omen in what is basically a low-budget exercise in "let's try to make a big snake movie without showing the snakes too often".

Too bad that scene, with two giant snakes battling each other in what appears to be some unnamed big city while a military helicopter fires a missile at them, doesn't appear anywhere in this particular movie. MPAA Rating: R for violence, sexuality/nudity and languageĭVD ReviewNice artwork on the cover for this oneÑvery promising, in a tacky B-movie kind of way. Stars: Jaime Bergman, David Hewlett, Adam Kendrick "In my book, people who play with snakes are creepy."
