Movie Reviews
Browse
Home
Back to the Future
Batman
Blade
Candyman
Childs Play
Die Hard
Evil Dead
Fast and the Furious
Free Willy
Friday
Godfather
Indiana Jones
Jaws
Jurassic Park
Karate Kid
Lord of the Rings
Pirates of the Caribbean
Resident Evil
Rocky
Saw
Scacy Movie
Scream
Spiderman
Starship Troopers
Superman
Terminator
TMNT
Tremors

Blade
Blade Blade 2 Blade Trinity

Blade

Blade is everything Spawn wanted to be and wasn't. While Spawn was a loud, obnoxious, incoherent mess that should have stayed in Hell with its erstwhile hero, Blade is a relatively subdued (it's nice to actually hear the soundtrack), stylish, well-directed movie that actually tries to build empathy and pathos into the characters. While both are adaptations from comic-books, only one is a page-turner.

Blade, or Eric as his mom calls him, but which superhero would command respect with the name Eric, is half-man, half-vampire, made so by his mother, who survived a vampire attack long enough to give birth to him. This gives Blade a certain edge in his understandable grudge against vampires, "all of our strengths and none of our weaknesses" as his main vampire nemesis attests. The aforementioned nemesis is Deacon Frost (Stephen Dorff) who wants to unleash a vampire apocalypse on the world, decrying the Mafia-type approach that has served vampires so well up to this point - "humans are our food, not our allies," he explains. Blade is aided by his mentor/weapons specialist Whistler (Kris Kristofferson) and a female hematologist he rescued, Karen. Her expertise lends her to both create anti-vampire blood, and a possible cure for Blade that would make him fully human again. Although one gets the sense that Blade's fate isn't entirely tragic. He relishes kicking vampire butt.

The movie Blade succeeds for two reasons. It's technically polished, with good acting, excellent directing and production design, and awesome special effects - the way the vampires turn to skeletons and blow away like dried parchment when they die is way cool. There are three accomplished action sequences, the opening party scene which Blade inconveniently crashes, a brush with death on a subway, and the final conflict, with some special effects I can say, as a movie seasoned veteran, I've never seen before. The second reason is that Blade understands the inherent pull of the vampire myth. Vampirism represents a life given to sin, essentially. They are sensual creatures, dependent on flesh and blood for survival, shirking the light, and yet eternal, like evil fleshly lusts the Bible warns about. Vampires are not tragic, like Interview with a Vampire would have you believe, but fun, cool, and sexy. That's their power. Is not sin sexy? why would it be tempting otherwise? Vampires are cool because they live in sin without paying its consequences - death. But for that reason, they are the enemy and must die. For sin is, in the final analysis, bad. This essential good/evil conflict must be there for this type of story to work. Spawn had neither this nor the technical excellence Blade has, which is why it sucks so bad. Blade reminded me of another good vampire movie, Bram Stoker's Dracula, by Francis Ford Coppola. They would make good companion pieces on video.

Premium Links

Aquarium EDU

Movies Online

WWE Divas

Game Systems

  Movie Collections
Movie packs
Movie Trilogies

Did You Know:

There are over 100 remakes based on the great box collections coming out in our century. If you are upset that Back to the Future has ended, don't be too worried because it will probably come back. 

Multi Movies
Great Movies
 
Major videos   walking in the Movies

This Movie information site is brought to you for your enjoyment and educational purposes. I urge you to read through the site and really make an effort to watch these movie packs because they are all amazing