Resurrection is a 1999 police procedural horror film directed by Russell Mulcahy and starring Christopher Lambert, Leland Orser and Robert Joy.
Detective John Prudhomme, a Cajun transferred to Chicago, and his partner Hollinsworth are assigned to investigate the savage murder of a man whose left arm has been sawed off and taken.
An FBI profiler named Wingate arrives and offers additional insights into the killer's mental state.
The team finds a fifth victim in a slaughterhouse, missing his leg, meaning that the killer needs only a torso to complete his work.
Knowing that the fake Wingate is the killer, Prudhomme and his team lay a trap and arrest the impostor for impersonating a police officer.
Although officers shadow the released Demus to the Chicago Union Station, in the restroom he escapes by changing clothes and crawling under the stalls.
Looking over Demus' notes, Prudhomme realizes that to complete his work, the killer plans to take the heart of a baby born from a woman named Mary on Easter, which is the following day.
Some time later, Prudhomme visits a recovering Hollinsworth, who is learning to walk on a prosthetic leg and promises to return to the job better than ever.
Fallon added, "If you can get past the similarities with Seven, you will surely enjoy this razor sharp, nasty flick.
"[3] Carlo Cavagna of About Film called Resurrection "an entertaining movie," remarking that "the cinematography is quite good by any standard, and the writing is decent enough to keep you interested."