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Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust

Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust (吸血鬼ハンターD ブラッドラスト, Banpaia Hantā Dī: Buraddorasuto) is a 2000 dark fantasy[4] vampire adventure[5] anime film produced by Madhouse, Filmlink International, BMG Japan, Movic, Good Hill Vision, and Soft Capital. It was written, directed and storyboarded by Yoshiaki Kawajiri, with Yutaka Minowa designing the characters, Yūji Ikehata serving as art director and designing the setting, and Marco D'Ambrosio composing the music. The film is based on the third novel of Hideyuki Kikuchi's Vampire Hunter D series, Demon Deathchase.

Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust
Teaser poster
Japanese name
Kanji吸血鬼ハンターD ブラッドラスト
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnBanpaia Hantā Dī: Buraddorasuto
Directed byYoshiaki Kawajiri
Screenplay byYoshiaki Kawajiri
English adaptation by
Based onVampire Hunter D Volume 3: Demon Deathchase
by Hideyuki Kikuchi
Produced by
Starringsee below
CinematographyHitoshi Yamaguchi
Edited by
  • Harutoshi Ogata
  • Satoshi Terauchi
  • Kashiko Kimura
  • Yukiko Itō
Music byMarco D'Ambrosio
Production
companies
  • Madhouse
  • Filmlink International
  • BMG Funhouse
  • Movic
  • Goodhill Vision
  • Softcapital
Distributed by
Release dates
  • July 2000 (2000-07) (Fantasia Fest)
  • April 21, 2001 (2001-04-21) (Japan)[1]
  • September 23, 2001 (2001-09-23) (United States)
Running time
102 minutes[3]
Countries
  • Japan
  • Hong Kong
  • United States[3]
LanguageEnglish
Box office$151,086

The film began production in 1997 and was completed with the intention of being shown in American theaters. It was shown in twelve theaters across the United States and received generally positive reception from American critics.

Plot edit

In the middle of the night, Charlotte Elbourne, a young human woman, is abducted by Baron Meier Link, a vampire nobleman. Charlotte's wealthy father, John, hires D, a dhampir, to rescue her, dead or alive.

At the same time, Charlotte's older brother Adam hires the Marcus Brothers, composed of their leader Borgoff, the hulking Nolt, the blade master Kyle, the frail/physically bedridden psychic Grove, and Leila, a woman who holds a grudge towards vampires. D and the Marcus Brothers race after Meier, learning that Charlotte was not kidnapped but chose to accompany him out of love for the vampire.

Meier hires the mutant Barbarois to guard him, consisting of the shapeshifter Caroline, the shadow manipulator Benge, and the werewolf Machira. Nolt is killed by Benge, resulting in the brothers confronting the Barbarois in their home territory. At the same time, D visits them. Grove causes a large ruckus using his psychic powers, and D becomes trapped in a void that Benge creates. D escapes the void, and the Marcus Brothers avenge Nolt by killing Benge. They then travel to a nearby western town, where Leila convinces the local sheriff to stop D. Fortunately, D is saved by an old man who recalls the dhampir rescuing him as a child from a vampire.

Meier's carriage stops to rest during the daytime, and Charlotte wanders out, meeting D and Leila. The two fight against Caroline while Machira escapes with the carriage. D defeats Caroline but is forced to seek shelter after absorbing too much sunlight due to Heat Syndrome-(a condition that is common among dhampirs and vampires). Leila faces a revived Caroline and survives only by chance when lightning strikes the mutant, killing her instantly. She takes shelter with D after and reveals that a vampire back in her childhood kidnapped her mother. This resulted in her being stoned to death by the people of her hometown when she returned as a completely different person and killed her father. Leila joined the Marcus Brothers to avenge her parents' deaths. The two make a pact to visit each other's graves upon who dies first.

The Marcus Brothers trap Meier's carriage on a bridge by bombing it and carjacking Charlotte. However, their trap is foiled by Machira's enhanced senses, resulting in Kyle being killed and Borgoff falling off the bridge but surviving, losing an eye. Meier and Charlotte reach the Castle of Chaythe, where Countess Carmilla Elizabeth Bathory awaits them. Meanwhile, Machira stays behind to fight D, but the vampire hunter slays him.

It is then revealed that Meier and Charlotte had reached out to the Countess, hoping they could fly to the City of the Night, a vampire refuge located in space. However, Carmilla betrays the couple, temporarily slaying Meier and tricking Charlotte into being bitten. Revived by Charlotte's blood, she uses hallucinations to haunt D, Borgoff, and Leila. D is unaffected and saves Leila from her hallucinations depicting her tragic childhood, but Borgoff is tricked and turned. Grove reappears and saves Leila by blowing up the now vampiric Borgoff with an embrace. He then dies as a result. D confronts Carmilla and is able to destroy her spirit whilst a reawakened Meier destroys her physical body. D and Meier then clash for a final time, with D gaining the upper hand. During the fight, Charlotte dies from her wounds, with her ring tossed to D and Meier by Leila. The final battle ends after D spares Meier's life and leaves the castle with Leila while taking Charlotte's ring as proof for her father and brother. As Meier uses the castle's ship to depart to the City of the Night, D and Leila look on, with Leila wishing the vampire success.

Years later, a funeral is held for Leila, with a large crowd attending. Among the crowd is Leila's granddaughter, who recognizes D from a distance and invites him to spend time with her family, but he kindly refuses. D reveals he is glad Leila was wrong about nobody being at her funeral and leaves contentedly.

Voice cast edit

Character Japanese English
D Hideyuki Tanaka Andy Philpot
Meier Link Kōichi Yamadera John Rafter Lee
Leila Megumi Hayashibara
Akiko Yajima (Young)
Pamela Segall
Charlotte Elbourne Emi Shinohara Wendee Lee
D's Left Hand Ichirō Nagai Mike McShane
Carmilla Bibari Maeda Julia Fletcher
Borgoff Marcus Yūsaku Yara Matt McKenzie
Nolt Marcus Ryūzaburō Ōtomo John DiMaggio
Kyle Marcus Houchu Ohtsuka Alex Fernandez
Grove Marcus Toshihiko Seki Jack Fletcher
Polk Takeshi Aono John Hostetter
Sheriff Rikiya Koyama John DiMaggio
Benge Keiji Fujiwara Dwight Schultz
Caroline Yōko Sōmi Mary Elizabeth McGlynn
Machira Rintarou Nishi John DiMaggio
John Elbourne Motomu Kiyokawa
Alan Elbourne Koji Tsujitani John DeMita
Priest Unshō Ishizuka
Leila's Granddaughter Mika Kanai Debi Derryberry
Old Man of Barbarois Chikao Ōtsuka Dwight Schultz
D's Mother Chiharu Suzuka Julia Fletcher

Production edit

 
Yoshitaka Amano created the design for the main character in Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust.

The idea for a new Vampire Hunter D film came after there was a fan demand to make a follow-up to Vampire Hunter D (1985).[6] Hideyuki Kikuchi was also in favor of this as he had often complained about the "cheapness" in the look of the original film.[6] Plans for a new film started in 1997 by director Yoshiaki Kawajiri and production company Madhouse.[6] Producer Mataichirō Yamamoto wanted to pick up the rights to Madhouse's Wicked City.[7] During the discussion about Wicked City, Yamamoto heard about the new Vampire Hunter D film and wanted to not only get involved with video distribution, but in production and possible theatrical release in America.[7]

The story of Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust is based on the third novel in Kikuchi's series D - Demon Deathchase.[7] The main character's design is by artist Yoshitaka Amano.[2] Amano's art style was matched for the rest of the characters in the film by animation director Yutaka Minowa.[2] The animation for the film was created in the Madhouse Studios in Tokyo while the post-production work was done in California. The English soundtrack for the film was recorded in 1999 before the Japanese dialogue was finished.[2] The film's title of Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust was a last-minute decision to distinguish it from the first film.[8]

Release edit

Theatrical edit

To promote the film, a two-and-a-half-minute-long trailer was finished in 1998 and was shown at American anime fan conventions.[2] A work-in-progress print was shown in 2000 at the Fantasia Film Festival in July in Montreal and at the New York Anime Film Festival in October 2000.[2]

The completed version of the film was only released theatrically in an English-language version. On its Japanese theatrical release, it was subtitled in Japanese.[8] It premiered on September 23, 2001, in America where it played in six theaters. It grossed $25,521 in this run and $151,086 in total, making it the highest-grossing Japanese film ever in a language other than Japanese.[8]

Home video edit

Urban Vision released the movie on DVD and VHS on February 12, 2002,[9][better source needed] and it was listed at #7 on the Billboard Top DVD Sales chart for the week of March 9, 2002.[10] Then on February 3, 2015, Discotek Media announced their license to release the movie for Blu-ray on September 8, 2015, and DVD on September 22, 2015, however, due to licensing restrictions, all releases have the original English audio only.[11]

In Japan, the film was released on DVD on December 19, 2001, by Avex Entertainment with both English and Japanese audio.[12][better source needed]

Reception edit

The film received generally favorable reviews from American critics. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 72% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 32 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "Vampire Hunter D's gothic charms may be lost on those unfamiliar with the anime series that spawned it, but the crisp action and nightmarish style will satiate horror aficionados' bloodlust."[13] It received a rating of 62 on the website Metacritic based on 15 critic reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[14] The Chicago Reader gave a favorable review of the film, referring to it as a "gorgeously animated surrealist adventure".[4] The New York Daily News referred to the film as "Beautiful, witty and provocative" and that it should "appeal to fans and non-fans alike".[14] The San Francisco Chronicle praised the director Yoshiaki Kawajiri stating that he "has a gift for striking visuals" but also noted that "his story manages to be simultaneously thin and chaotic."[15]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b バンパイアハンターD (in Japanese). Japanese Cinema Database. Retrieved July 6, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e f Patten, 2004. p.344
  3. ^ a b Browning, 2010. p.26
  4. ^ a b Alspector, Lisa (26 October 1985). "Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust". Chicago Reader. from the original on 29 December 2016. Retrieved February 5, 2019.
  5. ^ Høgset, Stig. "Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust". THEM Anime Reviews. from the original on December 3, 2021. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c Patten, 2004. p.342
  7. ^ a b c Patten, 2004. p.343
  8. ^ a b c Patten, 2004. p.341
  9. ^ "Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust - Amazon.com". Amazon.com. 12 February 2002. from the original on 2002-10-01. Retrieved 2015-02-03.
  10. ^ Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 2002. pp. 66–. ISSN 0006-2510. from the original on 8 February 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ "Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust". Facebook. 2015-02-03. Archived from the original on 2022-02-26.
  12. ^ "バンパイアハンターD(劇場公開バージョン) [DVD]". Amazon (in Japanese). 19 December 2001. ASIN B00005R6AB. Retrieved 2015-02-03.
  13. ^ "Vampire Hunter D". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. 28 September 2001. from the original on 9 October 2021. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  14. ^ a b "Critic Reviews for Vampire Hunter D". Metacritic. from the original on August 27, 2022. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  15. ^ Guthmann, Edward (October 5, 2001). "FILM CLIPS". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 5, 2011.

References edit

External links edit

vampire, hunter, bloodlust, 吸血鬼ハンターd, ブラッドラスト, banpaia, hantā, buraddorasuto, 2000, dark, fantasy, vampire, adventure, anime, film, produced, madhouse, filmlink, international, japan, movic, good, hill, vision, soft, capital, written, directed, storyboarded, y. Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust 吸血鬼ハンターD ブラッドラスト Banpaia Hanta Di Buraddorasuto is a 2000 dark fantasy 4 vampire adventure 5 anime film produced by Madhouse Filmlink International BMG Japan Movic Good Hill Vision and Soft Capital It was written directed and storyboarded by Yoshiaki Kawajiri with Yutaka Minowa designing the characters Yuji Ikehata serving as art director and designing the setting and Marco D Ambrosio composing the music The film is based on the third novel of Hideyuki Kikuchi s Vampire Hunter D series Demon Deathchase Vampire Hunter D BloodlustTeaser posterJapanese nameKanji吸血鬼ハンターD ブラッドラストTranscriptionsRevised HepburnBanpaia Hanta Di BuraddorasutoDirected byYoshiaki KawajiriScreenplay byYoshiaki KawajiriEnglish adaptation byEllen Moore Jack FletcherBased onVampire Hunter D Volume 3 Demon Deathchaseby Hideyuki KikuchiProduced byMataichirō Yamamoto Masao Maruyama Takayuki NagasawaStarringsee belowCinematographyHitoshi YamaguchiEdited byHarutoshi Ogata Satoshi Terauchi Kashiko Kimura Yukiko ItōMusic byMarco D AmbrosioProductioncompaniesMadhouse Filmlink International BMG Funhouse Movic Goodhill Vision SoftcapitalDistributed byNippon Herald Films Japan 1 2 Release datesJuly 2000 2000 07 Fantasia Fest April 21 2001 2001 04 21 Japan 1 September 23 2001 2001 09 23 United States Running time102 minutes 3 CountriesJapan Hong Kong United States 3 LanguageEnglishBox office 151 086 The film began production in 1997 and was completed with the intention of being shown in American theaters It was shown in twelve theaters across the United States and received generally positive reception from American critics Contents 1 Plot 2 Voice cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Theatrical 4 2 Home video 5 Reception 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPlot editIn the middle of the night Charlotte Elbourne a young human woman is abducted by Baron Meier Link a vampire nobleman Charlotte s wealthy father John hires D a dhampir to rescue her dead or alive At the same time Charlotte s older brother Adam hires the Marcus Brothers composed of their leader Borgoff the hulking Nolt the blade master Kyle the frail physically bedridden psychic Grove and Leila a woman who holds a grudge towards vampires D and the Marcus Brothers race after Meier learning that Charlotte was not kidnapped but chose to accompany him out of love for the vampire Meier hires the mutant Barbarois to guard him consisting of the shapeshifter Caroline the shadow manipulator Benge and the werewolf Machira Nolt is killed by Benge resulting in the brothers confronting the Barbarois in their home territory At the same time D visits them Grove causes a large ruckus using his psychic powers and D becomes trapped in a void that Benge creates D escapes the void and the Marcus Brothers avenge Nolt by killing Benge They then travel to a nearby western town where Leila convinces the local sheriff to stop D Fortunately D is saved by an old man who recalls the dhampir rescuing him as a child from a vampire Meier s carriage stops to rest during the daytime and Charlotte wanders out meeting D and Leila The two fight against Caroline while Machira escapes with the carriage D defeats Caroline but is forced to seek shelter after absorbing too much sunlight due to Heat Syndrome a condition that is common among dhampirs and vampires Leila faces a revived Caroline and survives only by chance when lightning strikes the mutant killing her instantly She takes shelter with D after and reveals that a vampire back in her childhood kidnapped her mother This resulted in her being stoned to death by the people of her hometown when she returned as a completely different person and killed her father Leila joined the Marcus Brothers to avenge her parents deaths The two make a pact to visit each other s graves upon who dies first The Marcus Brothers trap Meier s carriage on a bridge by bombing it and carjacking Charlotte However their trap is foiled by Machira s enhanced senses resulting in Kyle being killed and Borgoff falling off the bridge but surviving losing an eye Meier and Charlotte reach the Castle of Chaythe where Countess Carmilla Elizabeth Bathory awaits them Meanwhile Machira stays behind to fight D but the vampire hunter slays him It is then revealed that Meier and Charlotte had reached out to the Countess hoping they could fly to the City of the Night a vampire refuge located in space However Carmilla betrays the couple temporarily slaying Meier and tricking Charlotte into being bitten Revived by Charlotte s blood she uses hallucinations to haunt D Borgoff and Leila D is unaffected and saves Leila from her hallucinations depicting her tragic childhood but Borgoff is tricked and turned Grove reappears and saves Leila by blowing up the now vampiric Borgoff with an embrace He then dies as a result D confronts Carmilla and is able to destroy her spirit whilst a reawakened Meier destroys her physical body D and Meier then clash for a final time with D gaining the upper hand During the fight Charlotte dies from her wounds with her ring tossed to D and Meier by Leila The final battle ends after D spares Meier s life and leaves the castle with Leila while taking Charlotte s ring as proof for her father and brother As Meier uses the castle s ship to depart to the City of the Night D and Leila look on with Leila wishing the vampire success Years later a funeral is held for Leila with a large crowd attending Among the crowd is Leila s granddaughter who recognizes D from a distance and invites him to spend time with her family but he kindly refuses D reveals he is glad Leila was wrong about nobody being at her funeral and leaves contentedly Voice cast editCharacter Japanese English D Hideyuki Tanaka Andy Philpot Meier Link Kōichi Yamadera John Rafter Lee Leila Megumi HayashibaraAkiko Yajima Young Pamela Segall Charlotte Elbourne Emi Shinohara Wendee Lee D s Left Hand Ichirō Nagai Mike McShane Carmilla Bibari Maeda Julia Fletcher Borgoff Marcus Yusaku Yara Matt McKenzie Nolt Marcus Ryuzaburō Ōtomo John DiMaggio Kyle Marcus Houchu Ohtsuka Alex Fernandez Grove Marcus Toshihiko Seki Jack Fletcher Polk Takeshi Aono John Hostetter Sheriff Rikiya Koyama John DiMaggio Benge Keiji Fujiwara Dwight Schultz Caroline Yōko Sōmi Mary Elizabeth McGlynn Machira Rintarou Nishi John DiMaggio John Elbourne Motomu Kiyokawa Alan Elbourne Koji Tsujitani John DeMita Priest Unshō Ishizuka Leila s Granddaughter Mika Kanai Debi Derryberry Old Man of Barbarois Chikao Ōtsuka Dwight Schultz D s Mother Chiharu Suzuka Julia FletcherProduction edit nbsp Yoshitaka Amano created the design for the main character in Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust The idea for a new Vampire Hunter D film came after there was a fan demand to make a follow up to Vampire Hunter D 1985 6 Hideyuki Kikuchi was also in favor of this as he had often complained about the cheapness in the look of the original film 6 Plans for a new film started in 1997 by director Yoshiaki Kawajiri and production company Madhouse 6 Producer Mataichirō Yamamoto wanted to pick up the rights to Madhouse s Wicked City 7 During the discussion about Wicked City Yamamoto heard about the new Vampire Hunter D film and wanted to not only get involved with video distribution but in production and possible theatrical release in America 7 The story of Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust is based on the third novel in Kikuchi s series D Demon Deathchase 7 The main character s design is by artist Yoshitaka Amano 2 Amano s art style was matched for the rest of the characters in the film by animation director Yutaka Minowa 2 The animation for the film was created in the Madhouse Studios in Tokyo while the post production work was done in California The English soundtrack for the film was recorded in 1999 before the Japanese dialogue was finished 2 The film s title of Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust was a last minute decision to distinguish it from the first film 8 Release editTheatrical edit To promote the film a two and a half minute long trailer was finished in 1998 and was shown at American anime fan conventions 2 A work in progress print was shown in 2000 at the Fantasia Film Festival in July in Montreal and at the New York Anime Film Festival in October 2000 2 The completed version of the film was only released theatrically in an English language version On its Japanese theatrical release it was subtitled in Japanese 8 It premiered on September 23 2001 in America where it played in six theaters It grossed 25 521 in this run and 151 086 in total making it the highest grossing Japanese film ever in a language other than Japanese 8 Home video edit Urban Vision released the movie on DVD and VHS on February 12 2002 9 better source needed and it was listed at 7 on the Billboard Top DVD Sales chart for the week of March 9 2002 10 Then on February 3 2015 Discotek Media announced their license to release the movie for Blu ray on September 8 2015 and DVD on September 22 2015 however due to licensing restrictions all releases have the original English audio only 11 In Japan the film was released on DVD on December 19 2001 by Avex Entertainment with both English and Japanese audio 12 better source needed Reception editThe film received generally favorable reviews from American critics The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 72 of critics have given the film a positive review based on 32 reviews with an average rating of 6 4 10 The site s critics consensus reads Vampire Hunter D s gothic charms may be lost on those unfamiliar with the anime series that spawned it but the crisp action and nightmarish style will satiate horror aficionados bloodlust 13 It received a rating of 62 on the website Metacritic based on 15 critic reviews indicating generally favorable reviews 14 The Chicago Reader gave a favorable review of the film referring to it as a gorgeously animated surrealist adventure 4 The New York Daily News referred to the film as Beautiful witty and provocative and that it should appeal to fans and non fans alike 14 The San Francisco Chronicle praised the director Yoshiaki Kawajiri stating that he has a gift for striking visuals but also noted that his story manages to be simultaneously thin and chaotic 15 See also editJapanese films of 2000 List of anime theatrically released in the United States List of horror films of 2000Notes edit a b バンパイアハンターD in Japanese Japanese Cinema Database Retrieved July 6 2012 permanent dead link a b c d e f Patten 2004 p 344 a b Browning 2010 p 26 a b Alspector Lisa 26 October 1985 Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust Chicago Reader Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved February 5 2019 Hogset Stig Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust THEM Anime Reviews Archived from the original on December 3 2021 Retrieved May 3 2021 a b c Patten 2004 p 342 a b c Patten 2004 p 343 a b c Patten 2004 p 341 Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust Amazon com Amazon com 12 February 2002 Archived from the original on 2002 10 01 Retrieved 2015 02 03 Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc 2002 pp 66 ISSN 0006 2510 Archived from the original on 8 February 2023 Retrieved 8 February 2023 via Google Books Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust Facebook 2015 02 03 Archived from the original on 2022 02 26 バンパイアハンターD 劇場公開バージョン DVD Amazon in Japanese 19 December 2001 ASIN B00005R6AB Retrieved 2015 02 03 Vampire Hunter D Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media 28 September 2001 Archived from the original on 9 October 2021 Retrieved August 27 2022 a b Critic Reviews for Vampire Hunter D Metacritic Archived from the original on August 27 2022 Retrieved August 27 2022 Guthmann Edward October 5 2001 FILM CLIPS San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved August 5 2011 References editPatten Fred 2004 Watching Anime Reading Manga 25 Years of Essays and Reviews Stone Bridge Press ISBN 1 880656 92 2 Browning John Edgar 2010 Dracula in Visual Media Film Television Comic Book and Electronic Game Appearances 1921 2010 McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 3365 0 External links editOfficial Website at the Wayback Machine archived May 29 2002 Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust at IMDb nbsp Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust at Metacritic Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust anime at Anime News Network s encyclopedia Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust 2001 at Rotten Tomatoes Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust at Box Office Mojo Portals nbsp Anime and manga nbsp Film nbsp Speculative fiction Horror nbsp Japan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust amp oldid 1215901918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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