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Predator comic book: Predators breed Aliens in order to hunt them, then some unwitting humans get stuck in the middle. And Anderson's been smart enough to keep the cool species-pairing concept first suggested by the Alien Vs. Naturally, for those who still have a bit of freshly pubescent boy, or even tomboy, in us (so to speak), there is a twinge of a thrill at the prospect of seeing the rastaphibian hunters of the Predator movies getting scrap-happy with H R Giger's acid-drooling xenomorphs. Or, at least, an audience which doesn't entirely consist of freshly pubescent boys. Ridley Scott's chilling first instalment intoned, "In space, no-one can hear you scream" - surely the most alluring horror tag ever - while James Cameron's action-classic sequel offered the no-mess, gravelly bark of "This time it's war." Then Fincher's grim, part three mis-step delivered the brutal cough of "The bitch is back", with Jeunet's sloppy Resurrection apologetically muttering, "Witness the resurrection." Consider, then, the strap for Paul W S Anderson's kinda-prequel: "Whoever wins - we lose." Yes, you guessed it, the "we" here refers to the audience. Few franchises boast taglines so indicative as those of the Alien saga.