If you like science fiction movies with aliens, plenty of action, and are willing to accept what it means to watch a B-movie with pride (or shamelessness), Osiris delivers as an entertaining option. It won't reinvent the genre, but it does deliver what it promises: monsters, survival, gunplay, tension, and a bit of nostalgia.
The film maintains its tension with combat, creatures, and survival... but the ending leaves a bitter taste. After so much fighting, so much blood, and sacrifice, seeing Paris destroyed feels more like a punishment than a worthy closure.
Instead of a denouement that redeems human resilience, the plot opts to show the triumph of devastation. This diminishes the characters' efforts and makes the journey almost pointless. It's as if the message is: "No matter what you do, disaster is inevitable."
That kind of ending can be interpreted as a pessimistic—almost nihilistic—blow, but for many viewers, it breaks the emotional investment. After following the protagonists in their struggle, you expect at least a glimpse of victory, not a feeling of total defeat.
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