| Blade | |
|---|---|
Movie poster for Blade |
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| Directed by | Stephen Norrington |
| Written by | Screenplay: David S. Goyer Comic Book: Marv Wolfman Gene Colan |
| Starring | Wesley Snipes Stephen Dorff Kris Kristofferson N'Bushe Wright Donal Logue Sanaa Lathan Arly Jover |
| Music by | Mark Isham |
| Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
| Release date(s) | August 21, 1998 |
| Running time | 120 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $45,000,000 (est.) |
| Gross revenue | $131,183,530 |
| Followed by | Blade II |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Blade is a 1998 action film starring Wesley Snipes and Stephen Dorff, loosely based on the published stories of the Marvel Comics character Blade. It was directed by Stephen Norrington and written by David S. Goyer. Snipes plays the character of Blade, a half-man, half-vampire superhero vampire hunter who becomes the protector of humans against the vampires. Blade grossed $70 million at the U.S. box office, and $130 million worldwide. This success is often credited with starting the current superhero revival in American cinema. Two sequels, Blade II and Blade: Trinity, were subsequently produced.
Contents |
A man is led to a rave club by a seductive woman, only to find that the club is filled with vampires eager to feed on the human members of the crowd. In the middle of the carnage, a vampire-hunter named Blade arrives and slaughters all the vampires in the club. As a half-vampire hybrid known as a "daywalker", Blade has all the strengths of a vampire but none of their weaknesses except their blood lust which is referred to in the movie as "the thirst".
While tracking down a surviving vampire (Quinn), Blade encounters Dr. Karen Jenson, a hematologist who has just been bitten. Blade brings her back to his lair and introduces her to Abraham Whistler, his mentor and weaponsmith. Karen resolves to study vampirism and find a cure before she becomes a vampire. She soon discovers that the anticoagulant EDTA reacts explosively with the vampire infection. Meanwhile, Deacon Frost, a young upstart in the vampire community, clashes with his vampire elders. He believes that vampires should rise from the shadows and enslave humanity. The elders dismiss him for his radical views and because he was not born a vampire, like they were. Frost studies ancient vampire lore and comes to believe that he can awaken La Magra, a vampire god, to gain godlike power. Together with his minions, he kills the chief vampire of the region and imprisons the other elders.
Blade combats Frost's various minions in an effort to uncover his plan, but Frost manages to invade Blade's lair, kidnapping Karen and mortally wounding Whistler. Blade gives the infected Whistler a gun to commit suicide, then arms himself with a large supply of EDTA. He invades Frost's home and discovers his own mother, whom he believed dead, in Frost's bed. She reveals that Frost was the vampire that bit her while Blade was still in the womb and caused him to become a daywalker. Thunderstruck, Blade is defeated and taken to the Temple of Eternal Night for Frost's blood ritual.
Frost sacrifices the elder vampires in a magic ritual and gains the power of La Magra. Karen manages to break free and feed Blade her blood, giving him the power to fight back. He kills his mother and confronts Frost once again. Karen kills Frost's lover Mercury (with a garlic, pepper spray weapon given to her earlier by Whistler) while Blade slays the rest of Frost's minions (including Quinn) before engaging Frost in swordplay. Frost's new powers make him immune to normal weapons, so Blade injects him with EDTA, causing Frost to explode. Blade and Karen return to Blade's lair, where Karen successfully cures herself of vampirism. Blade chooses to forgo the cure in order to continue hunting vampires with their own powers. An epilogue finds Blade killing a vampire in Russia.
| Actor | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Wesley Snipes | Blade | A half-vampire "daywalker" who hunts vampires. |
| N'Bushe Wright | Dr. Karen Jenson | A plucky hematologist who is bitten by a vampire. |
| Stephen Dorff | Deacon Frost | An upstart vampire with great ambitions and influence. |
| Kris Kristofferson | Abraham Whistler | Blade's mentor and weaponsmith. |
| Donal Logue | Quinn | A cocky minion of Frost's. |
| Udo Kier | Gitano Dragonetti | A vampire elder. |
| Sanaa Lathan | Vanessa Brooks | Blade's mother, who has become a vampire. |
| Arly Jover | Mercury | A fleet-footed vampiress and Frost's lover. |
| Kevin Patrick Walls | Officer Krieger | A "familiar" or human servant of Frost's. |
| Tim Guinee | Dr. Curtis Webb | Karen's ex-boyfriend. |
| Traci Lords | Racquel | A seductive vampiress who leads a man to the blood rave. |
The character Blade was created in 1973 for Marvel Comics by writer Marv Wolfman and artist Gene Colan as a supporting character in the 1970s comic Tomb of Dracula. The comic Blade used wooden stakes and behaved similarly to John Shaft. The character was not originally a "daywalker" and had limited supernatural powers until he was bitten by the character Morbius. The film version of Blade was updated for a 1990's audience and the comics character was subsequently modified to match. The film's version of Deacon Frost also differs greatly from his comic counterpart.
Marv Wolfman, the original creator of the Blade character, unsuccessfully sued Marvel and New Line for $50 million after the release of the film. He, along with artist Gene Colan, receives a "based on characters created by" credit in this film but does not receive credit in the sequels or tv series. According to David Goyer, Wolfman representatives tried to persuade New Line that Colan should not receive a name credit to which Goyer replied "Fuck that."[citation needed]
The following songs are featured within the film.
The following songs are featured in the official retail soundtrack, Blade: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture. A majority of the songs are hip hop tracks that do not appear in the film.[2]
| Preceded by Saving Private Ryan |
Box office number-one films of 1998 (USA) August 23, 1998 – August 30, 1998 |
Succeeded by There's Something About Mary |
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