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Review
BLADE II
Rating:    
USA. 2002.
Director Guillermo Del Toro, Screenplay David S. Goyer, Based on the Comic Book Created by Gene Colan & Marv Wolfman, Producers Peter Frankfurt, Patrick J. Palmer & Wesley Snipes, Photography Gabriel Beristain, Music Marco Beltrami & Buck Sanders, Additional Music Daniel Saber, Visual Effects Supervisor Nicholas Brooks, Digital/Creature Effects Tippett Studios (Supervisors Blair Clark & Craig Hayes), Visual Effects Framestore CFC (Supervisors Robert Duncan & Robert Parker), Additional Visual Effects C.O.R.E. Digital Pictures (Supervisors Terry Bradley, Justin Martin & Nordin Rahhali), The Image Resolution Inc, Pacific Title and Digital, Pixel Magic (Supervisor Raymond McIntyre Jr) & R!ot Pictures, Special Effects Supervisor Nick Allder, Makeup Effects Steve Johnsons XFX, Production Design Carol Spier. Production Company Amen Ra Films/Imaginary Forces.
Cast:
Wesley Snipes (Blade), Kris Kristofferson (Whistler), Leonor Varela (Nyssa), Norman Reedus (Scud), Ron Perlman (Reinhardt), Thomas Kretschmann (Eli Damaskinos), Luke Goss (Jared Nomak), Danny John-Jules (Assad), Daz Crawford (Lighthammer), Matt Schulze (Chupa), Marit Vaille Kile (Verlaine), Tony Curran (Priest), Donnie Yen (Snowman), Karel Roden (Kounen)
Plot: The vampire hunter Blade rescues his good friend Whistler who has been imprisoned and tortured by the vampires for several years. Vampires then approach Blade, offering a truce. Blade is taken before the vampire king Eli Damaskinos who shows him evidence of a deadly new form of mutated vampire, the Reaper, which bites and infects humans and vampires alike, transforming them into its own ravenous kind. Blade is asked to head the Bloodpack, a crack commando team of vampires that have been formed to hunt and eliminate the Reapers. In an uneasy truce, Blade and the Bloodpack head to Poland and set about hunting down the Reapers and their leader, only to find that the Reapers cannot be killed by any traditional means of dispatch.
Blade II was a sequel to the highly successful Blade (1998), which was adapted from a Marvel comic-book. The sequel reunites stars Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson and screenwriter David S. Goyer. The director this time is the up and rising Mexican-born Guillermo Del Toro. Guillermo Del Toro first caught international attention with the vampire film Cronos (1993), then came to the US to make the decent monster movie Mimic (1997) and then just before Blade II released the acclaimed Spanish Civil War ghost story The Devils Backbone (2001). Subsequently, Del Toro went onto make a duo of further comic-book adaptations with Hellboy (2004) and Hellboy II: The Golden Army (2008) and gained considerable acclaim with the awards-winning fantasy Pans Labyrinth (2006). He has currently been announced to direct the two-part adaptation of The Hobbit.
Blade II is a sequel, not unlike Mad Max 2 (1981), that takes a quantum leap in quality over its predecessor and, like Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), reimagines the original on a much more spectacular and ambitious scale. Of course, what has happened in between the release of Blade and Blade II is the twin successes of The Matrix (1999) and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000). Guillermo Del Toro demonstrates a wonderfully adept ability at grasping the pyrotechnic balletics of the modern post-Matrix action film and leaps in with all the usual martial arts moves, with people bouncing off and climbing up walls, camera moves following combatants twirling in mid-air, slow-motion bullets trails and a requisite pounding techno soundtrack to underscore it all. There are some amazing makeup effects with the Reapers and their startling anatomical secrets, and a nifty array of digital effects with the vampires incinerating down to the skeleton and piles of blown ash as they are killed. Del Toro also understands the fetishism that exists in many of these post-Matrix films and almost overdoses on the look of the glistening shiny black leather and PVC, the jutting masculinity of the big guns, the muscles and designer tattoos. Blade II is an immensely satisfying and assuredly confident blend of horror and modern action. The recent Resident Evil (2002) tried the same thing but failed tepidly Blade II is all that Resident Evil should have been.
Theres no plot to Blade II, so much as there is just a series of set-ups. Certainly, David S. Goyer toys with some interesting ideas around the edges of the action, but mostly the film works best when it sets a bare stage for Guillermo Del Toro and the stunt people do their stuff. In the latter quarter, when the film tries to rely more on plot, offering up some surprise betrayals and vampire in-politicking, it is much more contrived and less interesting. The best part though is in the scaling of the plot up over the first film in creating a deadly new enemy and a situation that requires a cautious cooperation between Blade and his traditional enemies. The shaded ambiguities that exist here the uneasy truce, the suggestion of attraction between Blade and the vampire woman Nyssa, the uncertainty over whether Whistler is cured of vampirism add fascinating grey areas to the original. Best of all here is Del Toro regular Ron Perlman as the Bloodpack leader Reinhardt, a character that is construed as a vampiric counterpart of Blade himself, and who unfortunately doesnt nearly get the screen time he deserves.
Blade II was followed by a further entry in the series, the also excellent Blade Trinity (2004), wherein this films screenwriter David S. Goyer was allowed to inherit the directors chair. Blade was also spun out into a tv series Blade: The Series (2006) with Sticky Fingaz in the title role, although this was cancelled after 12 episodes.
(Winner in this sites Top 10 Films of 2002 list. Winner for Best Director (Guillermo Del Toro), Best Makeup Effects and Best Sequel/Remake, Nominee for Best Supporting Actor (Ron Perlman) at this sites Best of 2002 Awards). Last updated: Monday, 18 January 2010
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