<div style='font: 9pt ; text-align: left; '><i>The ending where Jill/Carlos just so happens to get level 6 clearance to run away with Alice</i>
Yeah, whatever. They found a way in, whatever. Not the best, but quite normal. And it helps lead into the next film and that they actually let her get away, like the first time. Fits well with the story (Alice escaping, etc.)
<i>Angie has to constantly get antidote shots, but Carlos just gets his one </i>
Carlos was infected for what, a couple of hours? Angie was infected for years.....
<i>Zombies that come up from the graves; how the hell did they get the virus? </i>
Yeah, that was stupid. That's the one I bitched about a lot.
<i>The ease that Umbrella was able to pass off a "nuclear accident" story, despite the fact that the epicenter was not near the nuclear plant.</i>
How the hell do you know where the nuclear plant is? Seriously, don't look at the movie in that much detail, it's not meant to be Total Recall Starship Troopers
<i>Creating a huge husking Nemesis, solely for the purpose of arming him with large weapons. (Gee, of course the STARS guys died. Automatic chaingun beats a bunch of rifles every time.) </i>
That's how he was in the game, huge with a rocker launcher. His sole purpose in the third game was to kill the Stars members (hence, the "Staaaaars" line that was a direct rip from the game) and to be the braun for Umbrella. That was the game tie in and if they did anything different, they would have been skewered even more than giving him "heart" at the end (lame, but it fit the storyline and connection with the first).
Seriously, this is not supposed to be a deep movie. Of course they're going to use some cliches, that's what studio movie making is all about these days (ie. Sony wouldn't even let the film get made without some cliches). Why do you think so many cliches appear even in the better films? You just have to live with it. It's supposed to be a fun waste of time based on the games with some additions (as Alice was in the original). It's rare when you get a movie that's like that but becomes a very deep film story- and/or culture-wise when you start to nitpick it (Starship Troopers is one of the few)</div>
I was there on that fateful day, were you?