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Ultraviolet (film)

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Ultraviolet
Promotional film poster
Directed byKurt Wimmer
Written byKurt Wimmer
Produced byJohn Baldecchi
Lucas Foster
Tony Mark
StarringMilla Jovovich
Cameron Bright
Nick Chinlund
William Fichtner
CinematographyArthur Wong
Jimmy Wong
Edited byWilliam Yeh
Music byKlaus Badelt
Distributed byScreen Gems
Release date
  • March 3, 2006 (2006-03-03)
Running time
88 minutes (Theatrical)
94 minutes (Extended)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$30 million
Box office$31,070,211

Ultraviolet is a 2006 American science fiction action film written and directed by Kurt Wimmer and produced by Screen Gems. It stars Milla Jovovich as Violet Song and Cameron Bright as Six. It was released in North America on March 3, 2006. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on June 27, 2006.

The film uses the basic premise of John Cassavetes's 1980 cult classic, Gloria,[1] about a woman and a young boy on the run from the mafia, and transposes the story to a dystopian setting where genetically enhanced mutants are fighting a guerrilla war against a totalitarian dictatorship. Many comparisons have been made between Ultraviolet and Equilibrium, Wimmer's previous film, such as the use of gun fu.

A novelization of the film was written by Yvonne Navarro, with more back-story and character development. The book differs from the film in a number of ways, including a more ambiguous ending and the removal of some of the more improbable plot twists. An anime movied entitled Ultraviolet: Code 044 was released by the Japanese anime satellite television network Animax, and created by Madhouse.[2]

Plot

Ultraviolet takes place in 2078, in the years following a global epidemic that causes vampire-like symptoms, including super-human strength and elongated canines. The infected always "hemophages", dying twelve years after being infected. The Archministry, a militant medical group headed by Vice-Cardinal Ferdinand Daxus (Nick Chinlund), took control of the government and began rounding up infected citizens and exterminating them in order to contain the virus.

Having been infected a decade earlier, Violet Song (Milla Jovovich) has become a ruthless killing machine with only a short time left to live. Working with a resistance movement of hemophages, Violet steals a weapon developed to exterminate all hemophages, only to discover that it is a young clone of Daxus named "Six" (Cameron Bright), carrying antigens developed to target hemophages. Rather than kill the child, Violet flees with the boy, believing that a cure for the disease can be reverse-engineered from the antigens before he dies from them.

Daxus reveals to Violet that the antigens in Six's blood are actually deadly to humans. Since the hemophages are nearly exterminated, the Archministry intends to engineer a new plague to maintain its power. When he refuses to give her the cure, Violet escapes with Six and lets him spend his last moments at a playground. Daxus arrives and take Six's body for dissection.

Later, however, Violet realizes that Six may not actually be dead. She storms the Archministry and reaches a lab just as Daxus is about to begin. In the ensuing fight, Daxus reveals that he uses enhancements he gained from an accidental exposure to the hemophage virus to aid in his rise to power. Violet kills Daxus and leaves with Six's body. Six later wakes up, having been immunized by the hemophage virus in Violet's tears.

Cast

  • Milla Jovovich as Violet Song jat Shariff
  • Cameron Bright as Six
  • Nick Chinlund as Vice-Cardinal Ferdinand Daxus
  • William Fichtner as Garth
  • Sebastien Andrieu as Nerva
  • Ida Martin as Young Violet Song jat Shariff
  • Ricardo Mamood as Song jat Shariff/Mr. Shariff, Violet's Husband
  • Jennifer Caputo as Elizabeth P. Watkins
  • Katarina Jancula (extended version) as Shariff's New Wife
  • Duc Luu as Kar Waia
  • Ryan Martin as Detective Breeder
  • Digger Mesch as Detective Endera

Production

Scene featuring Six (Cameron Bright) underneath the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai, China.

Production for the film began in early February 2004 and was shot in various cities across China, most notably Hong Kong and Shanghai. Production was finished in late June 2004. The film was shot digitally on high-definition video using a Sony HDW-F900.

In 2005, the film's trailer was leaked on the internet. Director Kurt Wimmer then visited several message boards and demanded all clips be removed in order to keep the film's plot a secret. The online fan community responded well to this, and all the clips were removed from distribution until the theatrical trailer was publicly released in January 2006. It uses "Clubbed to Death (Kurayamino Edition)" by Rob Dougan as the soundtrack[3] as well as "24" by Jem.

Reception

Ultraviolet was released in North America on March 3, 2006, with Screen Gems deciding not to screen the film for critics. The film was universally panned by critics, with a freshness of only 9% (7 out of 69 critics gave the film a positive review) on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.[4] The site's critical consensus states the following: "An incomprehensible and forgettable sci-fi thriller, Ultraviolet is inept in every regard." [5]

Critics took issue with some of the film's fight scenes, claiming them to be unrealistic and confusing. Specifically they mention the much-anticipated "Gun Kata 2.0" scene, which expands on the Gun Kata ideas created in Equilibrium. Although the scene is true to the original style, excessive use of CGI and shaky camera movement caused viewers to find the sequence hard to follow.

Critics has pointed at Screen Gems, who apparantly edited the fight scenes for content and eliminated some of the plotline by cutting more than half an hour from the film (which was later restored in the novelization).[citation needed] Comparisons between a rough cut version from the spring of 2005 and the theatrical cut proved there were missing scenes. The original edit was more focused on Violet's desire for a family and suggested that she was swept up in the resistance rather than the cold operative she appears in the theatrical release, which focused on her imminent death.[6] The unrated DVD restored approximately 7 minutes worth of footage from Wimmer's cut, clocking in at 94 minutes, versus the theatrical release's 87 minutes.

According to Rotten Tomatoes, Milla Jovovich and Kurt Wimmer were not pleased with the PG-rated release print, Jovovich said that she and Wimmer had been locked out of discussions of the film in the editing stages, and had not been allowed to see her own performance, which she felt, might have been improved if she had had some input.[7]

Box office performance

The film grossed US$31,070,211 in worldwide box office totals. The budget for Ultraviolet was estimated at $30 million. Although the film beat its budget, it was not successful in the North American market.[8]

DVD

The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on June 27, 2006 in North America.[9] The film was not shown in cinemas in Australia due to poor box office response in North America,[citation needed] but instead went directly to DVD in August 2006. There are two versions of the film, an unrated version (94 minutes long) and a PG-13 version (88 minutes long). The North American, European, South American, Hong Kong, Korean Blu-ray is the PG-13 version of the film. However the Japanese Blu-ray contains the Unrated version of the film.[1] The film performed quite well in the DVD market, grossing over $35.1 million in rental sales.[10]

The DVD includes:

  • A four-part documentary: "UV Protection: The Making of Ultraviolet," with chapter stops.
  • Audio commentary with Milla Jovovich.
  • In some editions, there were some deleted scenes which were cut from the final release. But not all footage from the unrated extended edition was in the deleted scenes feature.
Extended version

The extended DVD version includes additional footage, increasing the running time and adding more to the storyline / plot. In this release there are additional scenes which include:

  • A scene giving more in depth information on hemophagia. Including how it improves strength, speed, vision, hearing, bone strength and healing, but reduces lifespan to approximately 12 years.
  • A scene (near the opening of the film) which explains that Violet has reached the end of her lifespan, and has only 36 hours left to live. A later scene shows Violet's reaction to her estranged husband's creation of a new life.
  • The level of blood and gore is also increased by a small amount.

Some critics[who?] pointed out that in the 88 minute cut, it seems (according to the flashback) that Violet's husband was killed in the raid where she was infected with the virus. This may have been the result of bad editing; the studio may have also intented the change since they released their edited version. This directly contradicts the scene from the unrated DVD in which Violet discovers that her husband has remarried, believing her to be dead.

See also

References

  1. ^ See Ultraviolet at Rotten Tomatoes, where the synposis details the links of the film to the book
  2. ^ "Ultraviolet Anime Announced". Animekon. Retrieved 2008-03-18. [dead link]
  3. ^ Which also features on The Matrix soundtrack (though not in the trailer)
  4. ^ "Ultraviolet (2006)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
  5. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/10004504-ultraviolet/
  6. ^ Unofficial Equlilibrium Fan Site Article detailing the differences between the rough cut and the final cinema version
  7. ^ ROTTEN TOMATOES: Milla Jovovich On Resident Evil And Her Ultraviolet Beef
  8. ^ Figures from the film summary (which includes box office totals, gross etc.) on boxofficemojo.com
  9. ^ Movies.go.com profile page detailing North American release date
  10. ^ Rotten Tomatoes list of top grossing DVD rentals where Ultraviolet is featured at 37 as of September 17, 2006 (grossing $35.1 million)