DVD Review: Guillermo del Toro’s Blade II on New Line Home Entertainment

This Platinum Edition features some of the most in-depth, sophisticated supplemental material ever amassed for a film of this kind.

Blade IIStephen Norrington’s Blade offered a techno-hungry nosedive into a sultry vampire bloodbath. Blade is the pimp daddy of all comic-book heroes, an African-American superman trying to save humanity from a vampire apocalypse. With Blade II, Mexican horror maestro Guillermo del Toro morphs allows the titular vampire hunter into the king of all insects. Even when del Toro is under studio control, there’s no suppressing his spiritual, entomological freaky-deakyness. The director has become a tortured lover of myths. He’s the fallen Catholic easily enamored by the stained-glass worldview of fairy tale empires at the brink of destruction. In Blade II, signature del Toro obsessions are on fierce display: a monarch’s fear of aging, his incessant desire to suspend time and his messianic opponent’s own conflicted sense of past and future.

Del Toro’s The Devil’s Backbone was the haunting tale of a Franco-era orphanage whose inhabitants are forced to reconcile their past indiscretions and nationalist ideals. Adapted from the popular Spanish comic Paracuellos by Carlos Giménez, Backbone comes to resemble a comic-book panel show courtesy of the director’s startling use of aggressive, sepia-toned primary colors. Similarly, Blade II relates the mythic saga of two opponent groups (vampires and daywalkers to Backbone’s leftists and rightists) engaged in a war for cultural survival. And just as Santi’s ghost blurred Backbone’s sociopolitical battle lines, Blade II’s voracious pack of Reapers also seem to posit the threat of third party underdogs.

The Reapers—a strain of bloodsuckers that feeds on both humans and vampires—force daywalker Blade to forge an alliance with vampire overlord Damaskinos (Thomas Kretschmann), a throwback to Claudio Brook’s ageist ghoul Dieter de la Guardia from Cronos. This virulent breed of vampire slithers through the film’s Prague as if making their way through a labyrinthine beehive. Sewer stones come to resemble the walls of a technological bee colony scaled by the diseased minions of Patient Zero, Jared Nomak (Luke Goss). Damaskinos is a vampyric Dr. Frankenstein who yearns for the purity of his race only to have his guinea pig creation turn on its own master/father. Del Toro sympathizes with Nomak if only because the half-breed’s über-AIDS pestilence becomes the tragic byproduct of cultural carelessness.

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Blade and his vampiric enemies form a Bloodpack alliance that seeks to save humanity (Blade’s brethren, a.k.a. vampire food) from a plague that threatens cultural stasis. Del Toro subtly exposes a resentful Nomak’s instinctual need to propagate his own vampyric Aryan agenda, hinting at a double-cross within the alliance where a lesser, gimmick-hounding director might have kept mum until the last act. Del Toro’s night crawlers are the awesome composites of vampire archetypes and insect metaphors—they’re androgynous feeders that nonetheless display all the skills of sexed-up vampire dancers. A kick-ass fight sequence inside a Prague factory pits Blade against a duo of black-clothed vampires whose metal swords look and sound more like the hyper-swishing wings of sexy insect monsters.

As much as Blade II seems to stand on its own, screenwriter David S. Goyer wastes a good 15 minutes referencing events from his original story. Del Toro has fun with the film’s cornball title sequence yet its difficult to buy into its utter superfluousness. While the flashbacks may be crucial in explaining Whistler’s (Kris Kristofferson) return, Goyer’s revisionist back-tracking exposition feels an awful lot like a soap opera’s Monday recap. Del Toro also spends dubious time replicating visual flourishes more authentic to Norrington than to the original Marvel comic. Indeed, fast-motion shots of blue-tinted horizons were more effective signifiers of Norrington’s fast-approaching apocalypse than del Toro’s grimy descent into a pestilent tomorrow. Snipes’s Blade is considerably more aloof while his blood-draining enslavement seems routine despite its necessity to the plot—still, it’s a forgivable flaw considering how much subtext del Toro affords his vampire world.

Blade II is gooey and dank yet del Toro recognizes the allure of the original’s techno-pulse. Sans Traci Lords and meat hooks, Blade II’s rave sequence may not be as fresh as Norrington’s original but the music is still hot. Norrington’s journey through the vampire party circuit became a silky, potent jab at Euro-trash elitism, one that had to nonetheless lie in shame behind a more popular culture’s fetishized dance halls—Blade had to pass the knee-sock-wearing Asian school girls to get to his bloodsuckers. Del Toro places less emphasis on the decadence of the vampire lifestyle than he does on the societal effects of its widening plague. Nomak asks in one scene: “Is the enemy of my enemy my friend?” What first seems like a cut-and-dry moral dilemma becomes an awesome, cautionary tale against cultural homogenization.

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Image/Sound

Guillermo del Toro employs dark lighting throughout the whole of Blade II, and as such the shadow detail and delineation on this DVD transfer of the film (which preserves the film’s 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen ratio) has to be seen as quite an achievement. Del Toro’s operatic splashes of colors are stunningly rendered while the film’s elaborate special effects are every bit as lyrical and convincing after multiple viewings. New Line pumps up the bass on two exceptional EX audio formats: Dolby Digital EX 5.1 and DTS ES 6.1. The surround sound is exceptional and dialogue is incredibly crisp. When the beat kicks in, the effect is overwhelming. This could be the best sounding disc on the market.

Extras

Two feature length commentary tracks are offered on disc one of this two-disc set. Del Toro and producer Peter Frankfurt give valuable insight into the film’s detailed creative process on the first commentary track. Del Toro generously reveals his stylistic inspirations (the Doom video game, Samurai, anime films, etc.) and openly shows his lively disdain for anything in the film that still doesn’t meet his standards (mainly the use of Godfather dialogue). A second commentary track features Snipes and writer David Goyer and is most notable for the active role Snipes seemed to take both in front of and behind the camera. Also included on the first disc is the film’s isolated score.

Getting through the second disc’s supplemental material should take a week or so but the journey is well worth it. The Production Workshop section includes an 80-minute-plus making-of featurette titled “The Blood Pact,” which features an interactive collection of sub-documentaries readily available by clicking on the vampire glyph that appears on the screen. For convenience sake, a branching index has been provided. Six sequences from the film are highlighted within the Sequence Breakdowns section of the Production Workshop. The Visual Effects section is most notable for its Progress Reports, which includes makeup designer Steve Johnson’s lengthy video diary on the making of his elaborate creature effects. Del Toro introduces pages from his director’s notebook on the disc’s Notebooks section, which also includes snippets from the script supervisor’s notebook and unfilmed script pages. The last feature in the Production Workshop section is an intensive art gallery that includes storyboards and shots of the film’s many props and weapons. Del Toro and Frankfurt provide optional commentary on a 25-minute deleted and alternate scenes sequence that the director himself says is a must-see for any budding filmmaker. Del Toro is more critical of the cuts than Frankfurt-the director calls them “crap” while the producer calls them “humane.” Frankfurt’s acknowledgement of del Toro’s great empathy for his monsters makes this a particularly insightful section of the DVD.

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Also included are promotional materials: a survival guide to the Blade II video game; a theatrical press kit; the film’s teaser trailer and theatrical trailer; and the “Child of the West” music video by Cypress Hill and Roni Size. The disc’s DVD-ROM features include a link to New Line’s Hot Spot website and a script-to-screen downloadable feature.

Overall

Possibly the best sounding DVD on the market, this New Line Platinum Edition of Blade II features some of the most in-depth, sophisticated supplemental material ever amassed for a film of this kind.

Score: 
 Cast: Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson, Ron Perlman, Kuke Goss, Leonor Varela, Matt Schulze, Danny John-Jules, Daz Crawford, Rey-Phillip Santos  Director: Guillermo del Toro  Screenwriter: David S. Goyer  Distributor: New Line Home Entertainment  Running Time: 108 min  Rating: R  Year: 2002  Release Date: September 3, 2002  Buy: Video, Soundtrack

Ed Gonzalez

Ed Gonzalez is the co-founder of Slant Magazine. A member of the New York Film Critics Circle, his writing has appeared in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

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