Screen Rant has an exclusive Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City clip highlighting the film's efforts to recreate a '90s video game aesthetic as the film comes to digital platforms. Based on Capcom's survival horror franchise of the same name, the movie adapts the first two titles as Chris Redfield and his team of elite STARS officers investigate reports of a cannibal-like murder at the Spencer Mansion. Meanwhile, rookie Raccoon City Police officer Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield learn of a zombie apocalypse brewing in the titular town and must find a way out to survive and learn of Umbrella Corporation's connection to the situation.

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City served as a reboot of the Milla Jovovich-led film franchise with writer/director Johannes Roberts looking to bring a more faithful approach to adapting Capcom's games. The movie included an ensemble roster of game-accurate characters, some of whom included Kaya Scodelario's Claire Redfield, Avan Jogia's Leon S. Kennedy, Robbie Amell's Chris Redfield and Tom Hopper's Albert Wesker. Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City has divided critics and audiences alike over Roberts' efforts for a faithful adaptation, but he film has proven to be a modest financial success.

Related: Resident Evil: Welcome To Raccoon City Should Have Been Two Movies

In time for the film's arrival on digital platforms, Screen Rant has an exclusive Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City clip. The featurette includes interviews with stars Avan Jogia, Robbie Amell, Tom Hopper and Hannah John-Kamen discussing the team's efforts to recreate the '90s video game aesthetic of its source material. Check out the exclusive clip below:

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Throughout development on the project, Roberts' promise of making a faithful adaptation with Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City was an admirable one when compared to the decidedly loose approach taken by Paul W.S. Anderson in the original series of films. While critics were still generally mixed on their feelings for the movie, the reboot ultimately won audiences over for this attention to detail, with everything from its clever dialogue to exact recreations of locations and game set pieces. The exclusive Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City clip serves as a nice ode to the efforts made by Roberts and his production team to capture the aesthetics of its time period and and source material.

Though Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City didn't blow up the box office in its pandemic release window, the film did prove to be a modest success with over $31 million grossed and topped VUDU's charts in its debut as a rental title. This success could see Roberts and the cast get the sequel they've teased and expressed their various hopes for, with the writer/director confirming his desire to adapt Resident Evil 4, 7 and Code: Veronica. Only time will tell if its home media run further secures its future as Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is now available to purchase on digital platform and hits shelves on 4K Ultra-HD and Blu-ray on February 8.

More: Resident Evil: Welcome To Raccoon City Ending & Sequel Setup Explained