Fright Night 2: New Blood
Fright Night 2: New Blood | |
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Directed by | Eduardo Rodríguez |
Written by | Matt Venne |
Based on | Characters by Tom Holland |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Yaron Levy |
Edited by | Don Adams |
Music by | Luis Ascanio |
Production companies | 20th Century Fox Gaeta / Rosenzweig Films |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 99 minutes (R-Rated Version) 100 minutes (Unrated Version) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Fright Night 2: New Blood is a 2013 American horror comedy directed by Eduardo Rodríguez. It is a direct-to-video homage sequel[1] to the 2011 remake of Fright Night. None of the actors from the previous film reprise their roles, and the plot is similar to both the original Fright Night and its remake.
Plot
Charley Brewster, Ed Bates and Amy Peterson are with their class as exchange students in Romania, where Charley tries to reconcile with Amy after she suspects him of cheating. On their first night in the hotel, Charley spots a beautiful woman having a sexual encounter with another woman, ending with the former drawing blood from the latter, in the residence across the road. That woman is revealed later that night to be Gerri Dandridge, the alluring college professor who will be teaching them about Romanian history and culture.
While on a tour of nearby castles, Charley and Ed break away from the group and Charley sees Gerri seducing one of the other students. Later that student is missing. That night, Ed sneaks away while Charley spots Gerri loading a body into her car. After she drives away, Charley enters her home and finds a ritual sacrificial chamber. Gerri returns with a young woman whom she drains of blood; Gerri bathes in the blood, restoring her youthful appearance. Once this ritual is complete, she spots Charley hiding in a coffin. He manages to escape.
He tries to report this to the police, but they are convinced he is committing a prank. He tries to tell Amy, but she does not believe him either. The next morning he tells Ed, and Ed identifies Gerri as Elisabeth Bathory, one of the most powerful vampires. They decide to find Peter Vincent, the host of the paranormal investigation show Fright Night. Finding him at a strip club, he agrees to solve their problem for a fee. They leave and meet Amy at a train station. Boarding a train, they find Gerri waiting for them. Peter flees, leaving the others to face Bathory. Ed sacrifices himself so that Charley and Amy can escape into the catacombs. Gerri turns Ed into a vampire, then pursues Charley and Amy, but her quarry escape to the surface. Gerri finds and attacks them again as they try to escape in a taxi, and Amy is taken.
It is revealed that Gerri must bathe in the blood of a "new moon virgin" to withstand sunlight. In order to complete the ritual any witnesses must be killed; Gerri therefore must force Amy to kill Charley. Peter returns to the strip-club and is attacked by Ed. Ed, a fan of Vincent's show, is disillusioned by Peter's disbelief in vampires and fraudulent claim to be a vampire hunter. Peter uses a crucifix tattoo on his torso to drive Ed away.
Peter arms Charley with wooden stakes, holy water and garlic, and sends him to kill Gerri before the sun rises and rescue Amy. Upon entering the castle, Ed attacks Charley. Charley forces him to ingest the holy water, causing him to explode.
Charley is grabbed by Gerri and forced into a massive bathing pit where Amy awaits him. She bites Charley, turning him into a vampire. Before she can kill him and complete Gerri's ritual, Charley stakes himself, incapacitating Amy. He does not stake his heart, however, and his wound heals. Peter arrives and stakes Gerri, but he misses her heart and she pursues him through the castle. Charley emits a high-powered screech that shatters all of the windows, allowing the sunlight to enter and dissolve Gerri.
With the master vampire destroyed, Charley and Amy revert to their human forms. Reconciling, they share a kiss.
Cast
- Will Payne as Charley Brewster
- Jaime Murray as Gerri Dandridge
- Sean Power as Peter Vincent
- Sacha Parkinson as Amy Peterson
- Chris Waller as "Evil" Ed Bates
- Alina Minzu as Shayla Sunshine
- Constantin Barbulescu as Inspector Constantin
- Roxana Gârleanu Lupu as Peter's Assistant
Production
Fox greenlit the film and rushed into production at a breakneck pace. The first draft of the screenplay was written in a week and then it endured two months of revisions.[2] Although producers of the 2011 film returned, the decision was made that the story would not follow the events of the previous films. "I thought it was a little bit of a play on the James Bond movies, where it’s always James Bond, no matter who plays him," commented director Eduardo Rodriguez.[3]
Jaime Murray is not a fan of horror films and had never seen the previous films when she was given the script. " I read about ten pages and I didn’t really know whether it was meant to be funny or frightening. So I sat down and I watched Fright Night with Colin Farrell, and then I went back and I re-read the script. It was great because it gave me a point of reference, and it made me realize that even though it was really scary and dark in places, it was also funny."[4]
Will Payne made the conscious choice not to pattern his performance after previous Charley Brewsters William Ragsdale or Anton Yelchin. "This is a whole new cast so why not try and make this my own character, my own creation?" he asked.[5]
Filming took place over a month from November–December 2012 in Romania.[5][6][7] Temperatures frequently lingered around -15 degrees below Fahrenheit,[2][6] which caused a variety of problems. Cast and crew members shook and shivered the whole time;[2] cameras ceased to operate as the weather froze them;[2] the gas station explosion had to be filmed in a studio due to fire safety concerns;[2] and during a pivotal sequence in a swimming pool, actresses Sacha Parkinson and Jaime Murray were so cold that the filmmakers halted production. "I just wanted to finish the scene but they said they had to stop it because I was going into hypothermia," said Murray.[8] "My mouth was chattering so much that they could see it on camera and I was like, 'Can we just have one more take?', and they were like, 'No. You've got to get out the bath!'"
Home media
The film was released on DVD, Blu-ray and Digital HD in both rated and unrated versions on October 1, 2013. The rated version runs 31 seconds shorter, with 5 cuts of explicit gore and nudity from the scene in which Gerri lures a local woman into her lair.[9] The DVD and Blu-ray feature identical extras: an audio commentary with director Eduardo Rodriguez and producers Alison Rosenzweig and Michael Gaeta, Fright Night webisodes and a Dracula Revealed featurette which includes interviews with principal cast and crew members.
References
- ^ "Fright Night 2: New Blood Box Art, Photos and Synopsis". IGN.com. August 17, 2013. Retrieved September 4, 2013.
- ^ a b c d e Audio commentary with director Eduardo Rodriguez & producers Alison Rosenzweig and Michael Gaeta. 20th Century Fox Home Video. 2013.
- ^ "Interview: Eduardo Rodriguez on "Fright Night 2"". diaboliquemagazine.com. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
- ^ The HeyUGuys Interview: Jaime Murray talks Fright Night 2: New Blood
- ^ a b "The Hey U Guys Interview: Will Payne". heyuguys.com. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
- ^ a b FRIGHT NIGHT 2, no David Tennant. No Colin Farrel. Instead….. Sean Power.
- ^ FANTASTIC “FRIGHT NIGHT 2″ SHOOT IN ROMANIA
- ^ Crave Online Exclusive Interview: Jaime Murray on Fright Night 2: New Blood
- ^ Movie-Censorship.com - Fright Night 2: New Blood
External links
- 2013 films
- 2013 direct-to-video films
- 2013 comedy horror films
- American films
- American comedy horror films
- American teen horror films
- American teen films
- 20th Century Fox direct-to-video films
- English-language films
- Films set in Romania
- Films shot in Romania
- Direct-to-video horror films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- LGBT-related horror films
- Fright Night (franchise)
- Cultural depictions of Elizabeth Báthory
- American film remakes
- 2013 comedy films
- Films about striptease
- 2013 LGBT-related films