They attack with no reason, and usually with their tongue(what a lack of creativity). As if all of that wasn't enough, the creatures in this pose. There are countless questions raised by the cheese(Swiss, by the way) that is the plot, and none of them are attempted answered. We get additional instances of "learning without opening the book", something that was idiotic when it was introduced in the third(that this does not, by the way, follow up on the sequel-baiting ending of). The dialog is just plain bad, and flat like the great plains.
Locations are dull, lighting is poor, and the camera is constantly trying to fake tension(of which there is none to be found in the entirety of this) by shaking/excessively moving and using close-ups(something that only renders these horrendous performances even less tolerable). The acting and production values are the level of a soap opera, as another reviewer notes. Frankenstein and utterly *wastes* all this potential. This takes several good ideas, including that of someone's memories being a lie repeated until they accepted it and themes straight out of the story of Dr. Which makes it kinda strange that she's still powerful. Only no cocooning, seemingly no sped-up growth, and she had no idea until she suddenly transformed. She is then told by her "uncle"(who now admits that he is not related to her) that she was a science experiment of his, of combining alien and human DNA. she's about as convincing as a dummy) Miranda falls ill.