The Predator will be "part noir, part mystery and part Close Encounters," says director

Predator is a classic film, beloved not just for its iconic alien hunter, but its excellent pacing and switch-up from an action-packed war film (complete with some great one-liners) to a horror film where our heroes get picked off one by one. It's an example that writer/director Shane Black plans to follow with his upcoming sequel, The Predator.

Speaking to Den of Geek, Black said that his film would bend and switch between multiple genres like its predecessor did in 1987. "I think the tone shifting is important," Black said. "The sensibility will be part noir, part mystery and part Close Encounters." Close Encounters of the Third Kind, a largely peaceful sci-fi film from Steven Spielberg, might not seem like the movie to model a new Predator film after, but Black explained his comparison well:

"The feeling I loved about Close Encounters was, you had this ordinary guy, Roy Neary, to whom this is all new. I think the danger of a Predator sequel is that it's not new to anybody anymore. 'Oh, look honey - another Predator. Yeah, we had one of those last year. Gah, is he in the barn again? Oh God, he's had the sheep.' You know? That's the danger. That it's too familiar - we have to find a way to make him mysterious again."

If anyone would know how to blend genres, it would be Black. He wrote the screenplays for action-comedy classics like Lethal Weapon, and films like Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and The Nice Guys likewise throw relatively ordinary people into extraordinary situations. Black also played Hawkins in the original Predator, so if there's one person who can make this work, I'm inclined to believe it's him. 

Sam Prell

Sam is a former News Editor here at GamesRadar. His expert words have appeared on many of the web's well-known gaming sites, including Joystiq, Penny Arcade, Destructoid, and G4 Media, among others. Sam has a serious soft spot for MOBAs, MMOs, and emo music. Forever a farm boy, forever a '90s kid.