Summary Capsule
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A good idea, if you're doing an action movie, is to start with a little action. You don't have to, of course, but most of your audience isn't going to be able to understand compound sentences anyway, so you might as well get to the guns-and-blammo. I kid, lovers of action movies! I'm just doing a little self bet to see if I can tick off the most fans from one movie review. Anyway, Blade starts out with a slam-bang action sequence that more or less continues for the rest of the movie. I like that. Less "Boo hoo I've got vampire blood in me" and much more "I'm wearing 120 pounds of lethal weapons and ammo that I absolutely must use before the end credits." After a little rescue mission (to pull his friend and mentor Whistler from the clutches of the nasty pointy folk, the half-human, half-vampire Blade receives a gentleman caller with a message of truce. It seems that there's something even MORE geeky out in the world than vampires and leather-clad superheroes, and it's making vittles of both sides. As the vampire world is running scared, they recruit Blade to join a team of would-be-Blade's-assassins to hunt down the icky Reavers. Very slick, very fast-paced and very atmospheric, Blade 2 takes us into places where angels fear to tread (unless, of course, they're vampire angels, which is now a copyrighted Justin idea). As you look to your left — keep your arms and legs inside the vehicle at all times, sir! — you'll see a disembowling. On the right we have a particularly lovely autopsy. Don't forget to tip your tour guide on the way out! While Blade 2 is much more memorable than the first one (with that skinny kid as the big baddie), it's also about the most gory flick you can see in quite some time. You know how different movies have different colors and textures and amounts of blood? Like how relatively non-violent flicks might use a little chocolate syrup as a less frightening "black blood" to the red dribbles that some people exhibit in movies when they're shot (so many movie characters have some sort of magical coagulant that stops a gaping bullet wound from spilling more than a couple ounces). Blade 2 has a blood color that is so red (particularly when you compare it to the midnight tones of their surroundings) that it makes you downright crave cherry kool-aid. I would like to make a big hooplah over Ron Perlman here. He's been in just about every action movie in the last three years, and he just nails the part of the likable scoundrel (not that I want him to get my hands dirty or anything). He just stalks around, clearly enjoying himself, unlike quite a few antagonists I can name. French giants now have their hero. Sometimes I like to think of myself like a Napoleonic Emperor (that French thing coming back, a mere paragraph later), going around with a saber and tapping films on the shoulders for noteworthy achievements, as if I have some special right to do this. I do, actually. I found that right in a pond once, and it's mine! So I do declare that Blade 2 is the best horror-action movie of 2002.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Much of Karel Roden's dialogue is dubbed by an uncredited English actor since audiences found his Czech accent too thick. Groovy Quotes
Blade: [noticing vampire tattoo] You're human.
Scud: How ya doin' up there, W?
Whistler: How did you find me?
Nomak: Is the enemy of my enemy my friend or my enemy? Blade: There's an old saying: Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer. Reinhardt: Can you blush? Scud: Lock up your daughters boys and girls, the dark knight returns. Eli Damaskinos: Who do you think God really favors in the web? The spider, or the fly? Chupa: What are you trying to do? Stink me to death old man? If you liked this movie, try these:
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