‘Predator: Badlands’ brings emotional touch to sci-fi action franchise  

‘Predator: Badlands’ brings emotional touch to sci-fi action franchise  
Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi as Dek in 'Predator Badlands.' (Courtesy of 20th Century Studios)
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Updated 7 min 21 sec ago

‘Predator: Badlands’ brings emotional touch to sci-fi action franchise  

‘Predator: Badlands’ brings emotional touch to sci-fi action franchise  

DUBAI: In the latest installment of the “Predator” franchise, director Dan Trachtenberg is breaking uncharted territory by challenging the boundaries of traditional genre constraints, according to stars Elle Fanning and Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi. 

“Predator: Badlands,” set further into the future than any previous entry in the “Predator” universe, introduces two complex characters who defy expectations. Fanning plays Thia, a Weyland-Yutanisynthetic android, and describes her character as a revolutionary departure from previous portrayals of humanoid machines.  

“She’s able to access emotions. She has a deep emotional landscape,” Fanning tells Arab News. “Stranded on the most dangerous planet in the universe, she analyzes her environment differently, finding beauty where others see only threat.” 




Elle Fanning in 'Predator Badlands.' (Courtesy of 20th Century Studios)

Schuster-Koloamatangi, who portrays a young Yautja predator named Dek, also says the film breaks with traditional narrative constraints.  

“We see both characters at their lowest, struggling through circumstances that would normally make someone give up,” he says. 

The film deliberately subverts long-standing franchise tropes, particularly the Yautja mantra of hunting alone. In “Predator: Badlands,” on a remote planet, the young Dek, outcast from his Yautja clan, finds an unlikely ally in Thia and embarks on a treacherous journey in search of the ultimate adversary, so he can prove himself and return to his clan. 

The production was filmed in New Zealand, and leveraged the country’s stunning landscapes to bring alive the deadly planet of Genna, where even the foliage has evolved to kill anything that moves. 

“We wanted to make a planet that felt truly alive,” explains Trachtenberg. Every detail of the alien landscape was meticulously crafted to create an ecosystem that could kill as easily as it could inspire wonder. Razor grass fields became home to armored creatures, each design informing the next, creating a world that feels ecologically authentic and terrifyingly beautiful. 

The most radical decision was eliminating human characters entirely. “If we put a human anywhere in the movie, we’d start to invest in that character and we’d be back to square one — just another movie with a monster sidekick.” 




Elle Fanning in 'Predator Badlands.' (Courtesy of 20th Century Studios)

Instead, the film commits fully to the Predator as its protagonist, challenging audiences to root for a creature traditionally seen as the villain. 

The film’s linguistic and performative challenges were significant. Schuster-Koloamatangi spent extensive time mastering the intricate Yautja language.  

For Fanning, the transition from her previous films to this sci-fi epic was seamless. “I approach characters the same way, regardless of genre,” she says. Her background in action films informed her performance, bringing a nuanced understanding of physical and emotional complexity to her role. 

Beyond its technical achievements, the film offers a profound commentary on contemporary social dynamics. Both actors emphasized the narrative’s exploration of social connection in a competitive, often isolating world.  

“We live in a judgmental society, especially with social media,” says Fanning. “This film highlights that you can't do anything alone. You need support, community and the ability to embrace your flaws.” 

Schuster-Koloamatangi adds that the story fundamentally challenges viewers to reject predetermined societal expectations. “You don't have to conform to what’s been said before,” he says. “You can build your own future and be yourself.” 

Trachtenberg’s direction allows for creative freedom while maintaining narrative coherence, creating a film that promises to please both longtime franchise fans and newcomers. As Fanning puts it: “You don't have to have seen previous films to get hooked on this one.” 

Trachtenberg adds, “This movie was originally going to be called ‘Yautja.’ That word is all over this film. And that word comes from the fans; it does not come from the movies. It came from the ancillary material that sprouted up. So much of the aesthetics and the lore has all come from the fandom surrounding the movies, rather than from the movies themselves. 

“So, in many ways, this is putting on screen the stuff that has surrounded the franchise for so many years, but also being something that is really for anybody,” he continues. “It’s a crazy science-fiction idea. It’s a big, brutal, badass capital-A adventure movie that is hopefully exciting for fans of the franchise. But, also, there’s really no homework required.” 


Founders of UAE-based studio discuss award-winning proposal ‘When does a threshold become a courtyard’

Founders of UAE-based studio discuss award-winning proposal ‘When does a threshold become a courtyard’
Updated 37 sec ago

Founders of UAE-based studio discuss award-winning proposal ‘When does a threshold become a courtyard’

Founders of UAE-based studio discuss award-winning proposal ‘When does a threshold become a courtyard’

DUBAI: For centuries, the courtyard was the center of Arab homes. It acted as a meeting place that was visible to all and invited social cohesion and connection. 

The courtyard can be found in design practices across the Middle East and North Africa, valued for both its social and utilitarian properties — particularly as a central channel through which air could flow and as a place of welcome and hospitality.  

However, as our cities have expanded and modernized, this ancient design feature has slowly faded from the mainstream. That is particularly pronounced in the UAE and the wider Gulf region, where skyscrapers and hyper-modern architecture have now taken precedence.  

A traditional Emirati housh, or courtyard. (Supplied)

Nevertheless, Omar Darwish and Abdulla Abbas, founders of the UAE-based design and research studio Some Kind of Practice, are leading a revival that is pushing the Emirati housh — or courtyard — back into the spotlight.  

“The Housh is not a public plaza. It’s an internally oriented world, a space that is carefully shaped and controlled from within,” Abbas told Arab News. “You don’t design a courtyard first and build around it; it happens gradually, as families grow, walls shift, and privacy needs evolve.”  

The pair are the winners of this year’s Dubai Design Week Urban Commissions competition, the theme for which was courtyards. Their winning submission — “When Does a Threshold Become a Courtyard” —sought not only to use the design language of the traditional Emirati housh, but evolve it to meet the requirements of the modern age.  

A photograph from the pair's field research for the Dubai Design Week Urban Commissions 2025 submission. (Supplied)

“On one hand, the disappearance of courtyards means the loss of passive systems that once made buildings climatically and socially responsive. On the other hand, it’s an opportunity to reinterpret their logic rather than replicate their image,” Abbas said. “The courtyard doesn’t need to be nostalgic; it can be flexible, fragmented, or vertical. What matters is the principle it represents: the ability to host community, regulate privacy, and mediate the climate through design. If we lose that, we lose the intelligence that made architecture here both human and environmental.”  

According to Abbas and Darwish, the housh differs from courtyards in Egypt, Syria and in its informality — differing vastly depending on which region of the country they are based in.  

“Along the coast, coral blocks and arish palm fronds provided shade and ventilation. In the desert, mud brick and arish created flexible, easily repairable enclosures. In the mountains, stacked stone walls produced compact courtyards sheltered from wind,” Darwish explained. “The housh is not a static form, it’s a system of adjustments in which material, climate, and family all need space.”  

It’s this same spirit of adaptability that the designers wished to incorporate into a new design philosophy, believing that what was important was to take some learnings from the past, without sacrificing the changing needs of human beings in the 21st century or neglecting the benefits afforded by modern construction techniques and materials.  

“It’s less about reviving a style and more about inheriting a logic: How to design with climate, with resourcefulness, and with an understanding of the social life that buildings host,” said Darwish.  

That mentality was central to the duo’s proposal for the Urban Commissions competition. The idea was to explore how the concept of the housh could be applied to modern high-rise living.  

“Instead of placing a shared courtyard at the center, we explored how each apartment could hold its own view and garden internally, without compromising the privacy of neighboring units or adjacent towers. It became about internalizing the view — creating personal courtyards within each dwelling, where openness doesn’t mean exposure,” said Darwish. “That idea directly connects to our understanding of the housh —a space that allows life to unfold inwardly, protected yet connected. It’s the same spatial logic, reimagined for the density and complexity of contemporary living.”  

For both designers the importance of the courtyard is not only its form, but what it represents: a place of peace that balances interior life with openess and privacy with hospitality.  

“What makes it special is that it’s a space of privilege and invitation. It belongs to the household. Only those welcomed in can experience it. It’s an architecture that protects intimacy while still remaining social,” said Abbas.  

The designers are optmistic that the region’s design philosphies were evolving and beginning to shift towards a growing awareness of context, rather than just imitation of global models. They both said that events like Dubai Design Week are an example of how much talent there is in the region waiting to be unleashed.  

“The goal isn’t to abandon modernity, but to ground it; to make contemporary buildings that understand their climate, their community, and their cultural memory,” said Abbas. “(We want to create) architecture that’s global in dialogue but local in intelligence.”