Blade Trinity backdrop
Blade Trinity poster

BLADE TRINITY

Blade: Trinity

2004 US HMDB
diciembre 8, 2004

Durante años, Blade ha luchado contra los vampiros sin que el mundo supiera lo que sucedía en los bajos fondos. Pero ahora, tras caer en las redes del FBI, se ve forzado a salir a la luz del día para unir sus fuerzas con un clan de humanos cazadores de vampiros que nunca supo que existían, los Nightstalkers. Junto a Abigail y Hannibal, Blade sigue la pista de una Antigua criatura que lo está acechando el vampiro original: Drácula.

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Equipo

Produccion: Peter Frankfurt (Producer)David S. Goyer (Producer)Avi Arad (Executive Producer)Cale Boyter (Executive Producer)Lynn Harris (Producer)Toby Emmerich (Executive Producer)Stan Lee (Executive Producer)Wesley Snipes (Producer)
Musica: RZA (Original Music Composer)Ramin Djawadi (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Gabriel Beristain (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Alessandro Carrara
Irak, hoy: un comando de vampiros localiza un antiguo templo sumerio donde se presume que está enterrado el progenitor de su especie: la misión de despertar a la antigua criatura tiene éxito, pero a un costo elevado. De hecho, el plan del consejo de administración de Vampires Inc., tras haber resuelto definitivamente el problema de la sed, quiere utilizar a la criatura semimítica para destruir a su último enemigo "natural": Blade, el Diurno. Para ello, los vampiros deciden recurrir a los seres humanos para incriminar a la última amenaza para su existencia, y su plan tiene éxito hasta que una célula de una organización secreta llamada "Nightstalkers" interviene para liberar al cazador de vampiros. Tras "Van Helsing", el plan de destrucción de la antigua figura de Drácula mediante los horrores al agua de rosa del nuevo milenio continúa. Ahora es el momento del enfrentamiento final: el Príncipe de las Tinieblas contra el Príncipe de los Tamarros. Bueno, pues... caótico, ruidoso, absurdo y descaradamente copiado de los videoclips de MTV: así puede definirse en breve el capítulo final (esperemos) de la peor trilogía vampiresca de todos los tiempos, un final con estruendo. De hecho, el tercer capítulo se permite traer a nada menos que a Drácula en persona (llamado familiarmente "Drake"), que más que un noble mitteleuropeo vestido con trajes del siglo diecinueve, aquí es retratado a medio camino entre un Predator (mandíbula extraíble multiprocesadora y extensible) y un Gremlin demasiado crecido (rojo y con espinas en la espalda): Bela Lugosi, que se hizo enterrar con el traje del personaje al que debía su celebridad, se estará revolviendo en la tumba. La trama está llena de errores e absurdos de manera vergonzosa, hasta tal punto que el film en su totalidad parece un continuo blooper: hay vampiros en Irak patrocinados por Dainese (con guantes de motociclista y la famosa lorica para la protección de la espalda, llevada sobre el traje de camuflaje); vampiros muertos por los faros de la Mustang Mach I de mala calidad del protagonista (!!!); la secuencia en la que el único humano del grupo es atacado por Blade (casualmente); la escena de la huida del cuartel general del FBI (verdadero monumento a la estupidez de guion); la "idea" de confiar los monitores del perímetro de la base de los nightstalkers a la única ciega disponible, hasta la escena en la que Blade, acompañado por dos nightstalkers armados hasta los dientes, camina tranquilamente por el centro de la ciudad, donde nadie llama a la policía a pesar de que el cazador de vampiros es considerado el hombre más buscado del mundo. Mejor no seguir adelante. La interpretación de Wesley Snipes es estándar, aunque destaca por su inexpresividad por parálisis facial (tanto que hace palidecer al viejo Chuck Norris). Lamentablemente, hay que constatar que este bloqueo de los músculos masilo-faciales en esta película también afecta a la por lo demás buena (y ya vista en el remake de "No abras esa puerta") Jessica Biel, que aquí interpreta el papel de la hija secreta del "padrino" de Blade, Abraham Whistler, naturalmente muy secreta porque en las películas anteriores solo se explicaba que su familia había sido exterminada por los vampiros. Añadiendo risibilidad a la película está la explicación del otro nightstalker, Hannibal King, sobre el motivo que lo impulsó a unirse a la organización de asesinos de vampiros: básicamente, la directora ejecutiva de Vampires Inc., la Vampirozza Punkozza, no se la daba. Es importante destacar las peculiaridades de la organización de los "Nightstalkers", tomada de la famosa organización terrorista "Al Qaeda": células dormidas que se activan sin el conocimiento de las demás. Además, los simpáticos, utilizando fondos negros (no se sabe de quién) están dedicados a la producción de armas de destrucción masiva: de hecho, están utilizando bacterias genéticamente modificadas para exterminar a los vampiros. Y, por supuesto, nadie piensa en los riesgos de introducir en el aire un arma biológica para matar a seres afines al hombre. Pero, después de todo, estamos hablando de "Blade Trinity", no de "El ejército de las 12 monos". En el reparto (des)figura también un tal Jarko Grimwood (Triple H en el arte), luchador que interpreta a un vampiro particularmente musculoso con cuatro colmillos de oro (¿problemas de caries?): personaje evidentemente tomado de "Tiburón", el famoso enemigo de James Bond en las películas de 007 de los años 70, que al lado de Snipes parece casi un actor. Para reforzar la impresión de caos total de esta película, lamentablemente contribuye la ya mencionada banda sonora disparada a todo volumen por el sistema THX de su cine favorito, que aturde al pobre espectador, así como el truco de la fotografía "estroboscópica", utilizado durante las escenas de combate, para acelerar aún más el desorden que ocurre sin sentido y sin cerebro frente a la cámara. Angustiante.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (8)

Dark Jedi

4 /10

It might (barely) have gotten one more star if it hadn’t been the third one in the Blade trilogy. As such it has some mighty good movies to live up to and that it doesn’t.

This time David S Goyer took to both write and direct the movie. I guess he should have stuck to script writing or something. The action scenes are not too bad. However, that’s all there is. Just a string of actions scenes barely strung together.

The worst offence of them all is Dracula. When I first learned that they brought in Dracula as the chief nemesis I thought that sounded cool. Wrong! Apart from a fairly cool look when he get really pissed off the film’s portrayal of Dracula is a joke. It’s an insult to the Dracula legends.

To sum it up, it’s 2 hours of not too bad action but a disappointment as a Blade movie.

YYMBR

YYMBR

8 /10

After watching all 3 of the Blade movies in a row, it gives a lot of perspective. The first was before all the Marvel boxoffice stuff took off, the second was having some Reaper stuff which was cool, but Trinity was the best in the series for sure. It needs better writing as Snipes has attested. We can tone down the Deadpool a bit and have more Wesley being a badass and not trail off into side projects. Whistler's family origins type things as well as Hannibal King's, but focusing more on Blade because he seriously can carry the whole film like he should have been doing since day 1.

tmdb44006625

2 /10

When a horror movie has to resort to vampire dogs, you know they're completely out of ideas. That's the least stupid part of Blade Trinity.

Gimly

Gimly

4 /10

Blade: Trinity completes the Blade trilogy in cinematic grandeur, and brings about Dracula, an inevitable source in almost every Vampire franchise ever conceived of.

It was refreshing to have the "Elder" ruling-class/vampire-nation-lord/shadow-council thing dropped, since they were in both Blade and Blade II, and in both movies they were completely killed off, and ignored the existence of each other. Instead we have a group of happy-go-lucky vamps, who have one way or another made a mark in the world. You never find out how they managed to buy a skyscraper and a museum's worth of ancient art, but I'd imagine they had quite a lot of time to get their finances in order.

Anyway, deal is these vamps, right? Danica Talos (Posey "Queen of the Indies" Parker; Scream 3, A Mighty Wind), her brother Asher Talos (Callum Keith Rennie; Case 39, The X-Files: I Want To Believe), Jarko Grimwood (wrestler Paul "Triple H" Levesque), and their offsider vampires go to Syria in order to dig up the slumbering Dracula (Dominic Purcell; Straw Dogs, Blood Creek)... Or Drake... Or Dagon... They keep changing their mind. Anyway, after Dracula kills a bunch of them, he eventually agrees to join the team after he hears about the defender of humanity Blade (Wesley Snipes; New Jack City, Chaos) whom he believes may be a worthy adversary. Blade in turn gets together with the vampire hunting cell called "Nightstalkers", led by Abigail Whistler (Jessica Biel; the The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Cellular) and Hannibal King (Ryan Reynolds; Waiting..., Buried) and together they continue the war for humankind.

With me so far? No? Well you should be, because this plot is about as run of the mill as they get. While I'm on that, it's worth pointing out that where Blade's saving grace was this awesome mythos and story, and totally failed at character-ing, Blade: Trinity had fantastically written characters, in a sort of non-event storyline. Where Blade II blended them, making it the best in the series. Trinity was okay, but it lacked a lot of the engaging elements from the previous two films.

I think in part this is because the film is meant to sort of cater to the cinema audience. After the success of Blade II, it's like they knew that people were going to go to the theatre for Trinity so they tailored the film accordingly. You know, just little things, cheesy lines come across in a way more badass way on the big screen. Montages can get tedious on the computer, but can often blow you away in theatres. Explosions and action and CG backflips always translate better in cinema than on DVD. Unfortunately, I own the DVD, not a cinema. Maybe the goddamn vampire pomeranian they threw in would've seemed less ridiculous if I'd seen Trinity when it came out in theatres, but I doubt it.

I'd like to bring up the issue of names. Not that people have unbelievably crazy names in these films, it's the' Super Hero genre after all, of course they've got stupid names! I love it! But the Blade series seems to be populated entirely by characters with the "Saying Names" fetish. It's all "Hannibal King! Die", "Blade! There you are", "Whistler! Come save us." "Drake! It's him" and gets pretty unbelievably dramatic rather swiftly.

It'll be interesting to see how Ryan Reynolds fairs. This Marvel film came out quite a while ago, since then he's played Wade Wilson in Origins: Wolverine, Green Lantern for DC Films, he was the protagonist in R.I.P.D. He's set to return to the X-Men universe for Deadpool. I suppose if Chris Evans can get away with playing The Human Torch in Fantastic 4 and Rise of the Silver Surfer then move on to playing Captain America in The First Avenger I don't see why Reynolds can't pull it off. Hannibal was great, Ryan Reynolds is great but I'd be fine to see this be the end of it all here.

-Gimly

blackpanzero

4 /10

TRINITY is not a good movie, instead it is a solid "Blade" movie -- meaning, if you are not already a fan, don't bother. Snipes no longer plays Blade for humor, as he did in the first Blade

Andre Gonzales

Andre Gonzales

8 /10

All 3 Blade movies are awesome in my opinion. This one is my favorite out of the series. It introduced at the time a different type and kind of vampire. This is movie is freakin' awesome.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

"Blade" (Wesley Snipes) is now alone - surrounded by enemies bent on his destruction. Then, as luck would have it, he meets up with the "Nightstalkers", led by former vampire "Hannibal King" (Ryan Reynolds) and "Abigail" (Jessica Biel) who might just have developed a virus that could rid the world of vampires forever. To combat this threat, the vampires raise their king "Drake" (Dominic Purcell) and the battle lines are drawn in the ultimate fight for survival. Snipes is OK as a our leather-clad, mean, moody, hero but actually doesn't seem to feature so much - most of the action is driven by Reynolds who, whilst initially quite sarcastic and witty, rather overplays his hand and soon becomes just a bit too attitudinal; and Biel who appears to be on remote-control for much of her efforts. Purcell makes for quite a decent baddie, as does Parker Posey as "Danica Talos", though at times you do wonder if you should be shouting "boo, hiss" at the telly. There is plenty of fast-paced action throughout, but all in all this is just one, really pretty derivative sequel too many.

r96sk

r96sk

6 /10

<em>'Blade: Trinity'</em> makes for a weak finale to this trilogy. I actually wasn't overly bothered by it whilst watching, though with the end credits I was kinda left wondering what I had just seen - as in it is all quite forgettable. Wesley Snipes remains the star, albeit not as great as before.

The cast is the most fascinating aspect to this film. Jessica Biel, Dominic Purcell, Natasha Lyonne, Patton Oswalt, James Remar and even Triple H show up, and that's not even mentioning the obvious: Ryan Reynolds. A beta test of <em>'Deadpool'</em>, really. That style doesn't quite fit here.

This is also one of those movies that has tasty behind the scenes stuff to read about, who doesn't love that?! It does have the feel of a film that caused disagreement. At least Snipes & Reynolds reconciled for <em>'Deadpool & Wolverine'</em>, because that was cool - even for someone like me who had evidently not seen <em>'Blade'</em>.

I do hope we get that MCU reboot at some point in the future, if only because I reckon Mahershala Ali would kill it as lead; of course he wouldn't at all be able to replicate Snipes, but that's OK. It'd be interesting to see a fresh take on it with a larger budget et al.

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB