Directed by former special effects artist Patrick Tatopoulos, it is shoddily paced and appears to have been lit with a candle, presumably to hide its obvious budget shortfalls.
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:74
Fresh:24
Rotten:50
Average Rating:4.4/10
Consensus: Despite the best efforts of its competent cast, Underworld: Rise of the Lycans is an indistinguishable and unnecessary prequel.
Rated: 18 [See Full Rating] for bloody violence and some sexuality.
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:23-01-2009
Synopsis: The third film in the UNDERWORLD saga goes back hundreds of years to explain the origins of the feud between the vampire Death Dealers and the werewolf Lycans. Taking over directing duties from Len... The third film in the UNDERWORLD saga goes back hundreds of years to explain the origins of the feud between the vampire Death Dealers and the werewolf Lycans. Taking over directing duties from Len Wiseman is rookie Patrick Tatoupolos, known for his creature-designing duties in GODZILLA (1998), I AM LEGEND (2007), and the first two films in this series. Less an action-horror film than an old-fashioned "sword-and-sandal" film with monsters, RISE OF THE LYCANS finally gets to the root of why those vampires and werewolves really can't stand each other. Ruled by Viktor (Bill Nighy, VALKYRIE), the aristocratic, vampiric Death Dealers keep the wolflike Lycans as slaves. When a captive Lycan woman births a human boy, Viktor resists the urge to kill it, instead naming him Lucian and keeping him as a pet. Lucian (Michael Sheen, FROST/NIXON) grows up to be a blacksmith with the ability to change between human and wolf and begins a clandestine romance with Viktor’s daughter, Sonja (Rhona Mitra, DOOMSDAY). Viktor learns of this forbidden romance and takes drastic steps to ensure that Sonja will never be able to see Lucian again. Lucian, in retaliation, leads a Lycan slave revolt, resulting in an all-out assault on Viktor’s kingdom. Though viewers who have skipped the first two installments of the saga may feel a little left out when it comes to the mythology of the series, LYCANS hits the ground running and doesn’t allow much time for questions. While Sheen has been lauded for his work in more traditionally dramatic films, here he gives his all to every growl and battle cry. Mitra is an appealing presence as Sonja, and Nighy is visibly relishing the opportunity to glower in his blue contacts and chew the moonlight-bathed scenery. [More]
Starring: Michael Sheen, Bill Nighy, Rhona Mitra, Steven Mackintosh
Starring: Michael Sheen, Bill Nighy, Rhona Mitra, Steven Mackintosh, Kevin Grevioux
Director: Patrick Tatopoulos
Director: Patrick Tatopoulos
Screenwriter: Dirk Blackman, Howard McCain
Story: Len Wiseman, Robert Orr, Danny McBride
Producer: Tom Rosenberg, Gary Lucchesi, Len Wiseman, Richard Wright
Composer: Paul Haslinger
Studio: Screen Gems
Reviews for Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
A needless threequel. Note to director: avoid ‘rise of the’ titles.
Basically it’s Frost/Nixon to Dross/Vixen. And there’s plenty to be ashamed of.
It may be a definite upswing in quality for the series, but if you thought the previous two films were overblown goth-horror nonsense, Rise Of The Lycans really isn’t going to change your mind…
The film wrings the last drops from the franchise, with that Romeo and Juliet – or that should that be Romero and Juliet? – plot twist making for a flick likely to delight horror fans.
Even with Doomsday's Rhona Mitra as a replacement sultry presence, it's likely to disappoint the franchise's core audience of young males.
Uninspired prequel-slash-threequel that seems to have contractual obligation written all over it.
The digital video images are blurry, the fight scenes messy, the editing jerky, and the derivative plot absurdly overwrought.
A casting disaster. Michael Sheen played Tony Blair and David Frost. Now he's killed a franchise.
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans is surprisingly campy fun, mostly succeeding through the power of its lead performances.
For all you guys who were dragged kicking and screaming to Twilight last year, here's your chance to show your woman what a real vampire movie is all about.
Unlike Mr. Nighy, who puts an amusing camp spin on his every line and gesture, Mr. Sheen appears to have taken his monster duties seriously.
swords clang, three-pronged arrows whoosh, and blood spurts with the same insouciant ennui that pervades the film as a whole.
Looking like a low-rent, fraction-of-the-cost cousin to the previous two efforts, the franchise's latest (and hopefully last) entry is muddy-looking, undistinguished, and frustratingly minimal in scope.
... bookends the original with its sequel (Evolution) so well that the three films presented together are actually better than each of the trilogy's three individual parts.
Not deep or particularly good, Underworld: Rise of the Lycans is the kind of innocuous fluff that will appeal to fans of the earlier entries. Everyone else can safely skip it.
Awkward camera angles, editing and pacing of some fight sequences gives a direct-to-video at times. If you're a fan of the last two Underworld movies and are willing to suspend your disbelief and to check your brain at the door for 93 minutes, you'll at l
While the movie isn't the worst thing in the world, it's just as forgettable, if not more than, the first two UNDERWORLD films.
Latest News for Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
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Now that "Underworld: Rise of the Lycans" is in theaters, it seems appropriate to ask about the future of the franchise -- a subject that Len Wiseman was happy to discuss with... More...
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