Resurrection: A Biohazard Story (2026) movie poster

Movie

Resurrection: A Biohazard Story

Released 2026-03-22

View on IMDb / official page ↗

Narrative tropes

Man-Made Monsters

medium

Wesker is the identifiable creator/engineer behind the bioterror threat; the viral agent represents crossing natural/ethical boundaries through biological engineering; the resulting outbreak in Rosa Enferma is the destructive consequence of that creation spreading beyond control. Core pattern fulfilled: creator (Wesker), unnatural act (engineered viral agent), creation turns destructive (the infection crisis).

About this trope: A creator uses science to overstep natural boundaries — creating life, resurrecting the dead, engineering organisms, or fundamentally altering nature — and the creation turns destructive.

Violence Gets Results

medium

The plot's endpoint is explicitly framed as a physical 'renewed confrontation' with Wesker, with no diplomatic resolution described or implied. The four protagonists are S.T.A.R.S. combat specialists — their defining capability is combat, not negotiation. The word 'forcing' in 'forcing a renewed confrontation' signals no non-violent off-ramp was available. Story does not question whether violence is appropriate.

About this trope: The central conflict is ultimately resolved through physical force rather than negotiation, diplomacy, or systemic change. Talking fails; fighting works.

Movies that share these tropes

Full plot (spoilers)

Set in 2021, decades after the events of the Spencer Mansion incident, a new biohazard outbreak erupts in Rosa Enferma, a remote town in Mexico. The crisis draws veteran S.T.A.R.S. members Chris Redfield, Jill Valentine, Barry Burton, and Rebecca Chambers back into action. As the heroes investigate the town's growing infection, they discover that Albert Wesker is once again behind the bioterror threat, forcing a renewed confrontation with their old nemesis. The film is structured as four roughly 15-minute chapters. Specific in-story plot beats (e.g., how Wesker survived, the nature of the viral agent, or the resolution) are not detailed in available sources; coverage focuses on premise and cast rather than narrative specifics. The production is explicitly non-canonical to official Resident Evil lore.

Sources: TMDb, GameWatcher, WebSearch/Bloody Disgusting (search snippet), WebSearch/md-eksperiment (search snippet)