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Dracula 2000 takes its lead from the dark and sexually magnetic modern vampire established by Anne Rice and on film with Bram Stokers Dracula (1992). Dracula 2000 could be said to be a modern sensual vampire equivalent of Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972) in fact, it is the film Dracula A.D. 1972 should have been. There is a good script from Joel Soisson, author also of Trick or Treat (1986), Highlander: Endgame (2000) and producer of a number of genre films including the Prophecy trilogy. Soisson knowingly pastiches from vampire cinema and fiction the Demeter crash from the Bram Stoker novel is replayed with the captain tied to the wheel of a small plane instead of a ship; Dracula gets three new wives; and Gerard Butler has a witty line: I never drink ... coffee. And of course, the film uses Anne Rices home turf New Orleans as its setting. Joel Soisson also appropriates characters from the Bram Stoker novel Lucy Westenra, Dr Seward although you are not sure why. The film sets itself up as a modern-day sequel to the events of Dracula (1897) but this places it in the oddly improbable position of having a Dracula who has encountered two sets of people, both with the same names, one in 1897 and one in 2000. Soisson also falls into the cliches of the modern Dracula film Dracula seeking true love, descendants of the vampire hunters in Dracula. This is balanced out by the sheer ingenuity of many parts such as the fascinating revelation of Draculas origins and the logical explanation of his aversion to things Christian and silver. At the centre of Dracula 2000 is a breathtakingly sexual, magnetic performance from Gerard Butler. Patrick Lussier plays it up, minimizing Gerard Butlers dialogue and maximizing the dark, smouldering looks, all shot with Butler looking up from under his brow or in bared chest. It is a performance that simmers with raw sexuality far more so than Gary Oldmans performance did in Bram Stokers Dracula. Indeed, Gerard Butler has far more presence here than when he was cast as the supposedly moody romantic title character in the musical version of The Phantom of the Opera (2004). Patrick Lussier directs with some alluring and at times hypnotic tricks Marys dream visions of Dracula with him at one point passing through her roommate, some nifty effects with lenses turning different colours, vampires transforming into hordes of fluttering bats or coalescing from mist. In a way, this is Dracula the action movie Lussier readily borrows more than one or two tricks from The Matrix (1999) with vampires doing mid-air flips and acrobatics. However, this reliance on cool effects also ends up being an approach that wrings any atmosphere out of the film. The difference is best seen in contrast with Bram Stokers Dracula there Francis Ford Coppola eschewed all forms of visual effects trickery and produced a series of flamboyant and ravishingly sensual flourishes of directorial technique; in Dracula 2000, Patrick Lussier delights in CGI trickery and produces some cute trick effects but never any atmosphere. In Dracula 1992, the wives seducing Jonathan Harker was a dazzlingly sensual scene, here the wives crawling all around the walls as they come onto Jonny Lee Miller is a cute effect but no more than that. Dracula 1992 has a fabulous love scene with Dracula seducing Winona Ryder; a similar scene here has the nifty effect of the lovers taking off and flying around the room but little in the way of sensuality. That ultimately is the failing of Dracula 2000 a near good film that misses the mark through too little atmosphere and too much reliance on CGI trickery. Patrick Lussier later directed two back-to-back shot released-to-video sequels Dracula II: Ascension (2003) and Dracula III: The Legacy (2004). Lussier had earlier made his directorial debut on the Joel Soisson produced The Prophecy 3: The Ascent (2000) and would later go onto make White Noise: The Light (2007), My Bloody Valentine (2009) and Drive Angry (2011). (Nominee Best Supporting Actor (Gerard Butler) and Best Makeup Effects at this sites Best of 2000 Awards).
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