Virus

Life on earth is in for a shock.

5.4
19991h 40m

When the crew of an American tugboat boards an abandoned Russian research vessel, the alien life form aboard regards them as a virus which must be destroyed.

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures
Logo for Mutual Film Company
Logo for Dark Horse Entertainment

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: The Call For Help

The Call For Help

Thumbnail for video: Director John Bruno On Creating The Storm

Director John Bruno On Creating The Storm

Cast

Photo of Jamie Lee Curtis

Jamie Lee Curtis

Kelly Foster

Photo of William Baldwin

William Baldwin

Steve Baker

Photo of Donald Sutherland

Donald Sutherland

Captain Robert Everton

Photo of Joanna Pacula

Joanna Pacula

Nadia Vinogradova

Photo of Marshall Bell

Marshall Bell

J.W. Woods Jr.

Photo of Levan Uchaneishvili

Levan Uchaneishvili

Captain Alexi

Photo of Yuri Chervotkin

Yuri Chervotkin

Colonel Kominski

Photo of Keith Flippen

Keith Flippen

Captain Lonya Rostov

Photo of David Eggby

David Eggby

Norfolk Captain

More Like This

Reviews

J

John Chard

3/10

Goliath Machine Malarkey!

Virus is directed by John Bruno and written by Chuck Pfarrer and Dennis Feldman. It stars Jamie Lee Curtis, William Baldwin, Donald Sutherland, Joanna Pacula, Marshall Bell, Sherman Augustus, Cliff Curtis and Julio Oscar Mechoso. Music is by Joel McNeely and cinematography by David Eggby.

The crew of an American tugboat boards an abandoned Russian research vessel and quickly sets about claiming salvage rights. However, there is something on board, just not human, and it potentially spells doom for all.

Virus is a derivative big-budget genre film that is not only a hack job, but almost certainly the lowest point of Donald Sutherland's otherwise superb career. The premise here has been mined many a time before, including the previous year to "Virus" with "Deep Rising". However, unlike "Deep Rising's" glorious sense of fun amongst the creature feature carnage, "Virus" is unintentionally funny since it's all played very straight.

The humans are up against alien robot thingies, one of which looks suspiciously like a robotic "Brundlefly" mixed with "Short Circuit's Number 5". There's a modicum of interest in the virus narrative thread, with the need for human body parts a tantalising proposition, but it looks and comes off as feeble steals from better genre pictures. The high energy finale, with whizz bangs and fire crackers, is at least played with good action intent, but by then it's too late to save a rip-off stinker that wastes a very good cast list. 3/10

You've reached the end.