Van Helsing
From Open Encyclopedia
- For other uses of "Van Helsing", see Van Helsing (disambiguation).
| Van Helsing | |
|---|---|
| Image:Van Helsing poster.jpg {{{caption|}}} | |
| Directed by | Stephen Sommers |
| Produced by | Stephen Sommers , Bob Ducsay |
| Written by | Stephen Sommers (loosely based on Bram Stoker's novel Dracula, Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein, and film versions of these and the Wolf Man) |
| Starring | Hugh Jackman Kate Beckinsale Richard Roxburgh |
| Music by | {{{music}}} |
| Cinematography | {{{cinematography}}} |
| Editing by | {{{editing}}} |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| Released | May 7 2004 |
| Running time | 2 hours, 12 minutes |
| Language | English |
| Budget | approximately $160 - $170 million |
| Preceded by | {{{preceded_by}}} |
| Followed by | {{{followed_by}}} |
| IMDb profile | |
| {{{footnotes|}}} | |
Van Helsing is a 2004 action / horror film directed by Stephen Sommers. The film stars Hugh Jackman and Kate Beckinsale.
Contents |
Plot summary
During the late 19th century Dr. Frankenstein works with Count Dracula to bring the dead back to life. In doing so he creates Frankenstein's Monster. Dracula disposes of Frankenstein and the monster goes into hiding.
One year later Van Helsing is sent to Eastern Europe by a secret religious organization with ties to the Vatican in order to vanquish Dracula and save the family of the beautiful Anna from eternal purgatory. Long ago, an ancestor of Anna swore that he and his descendants would not enter Paradise until Dracula was destroyed.
Dracula tries to use Igor (Frankenstein's assistant) and Frankenstein's equipment to animate his offspring, which are born dead. However, without Dr. Frankenstein's expertise these attempts fail.
Van Helsing discovers that Dracula cannot be killed by the 'conventional' methods of disposing of a vampire, and also that Dracula knows of him. With Van Helsing's memory fragmented, he finds this curious.
Meanwhile, Dracula uses Frankenstein's monster as a catalyst to start a chain reaction that successfully animates Dracula's dead children.
Count Dracula is able to control werewolves after their first full moon, having them do his bidding; however, this is an ironic ability of Dracula's, because only a bite from a werewolf can kill him. One of those who suffers from this control is Velkan Valerious, son of the Gypsy King Boris Valerious; despite the fact that his family had been hunting Dracula since 1462, Velkan falls under the curse when he's bitten by one of Dracula's previous wolves while protecting his sister Anna from it. He was later killed by the monster hunter Van Helsing, but not before biting him, giving him the power to finally kill Dracula. Van Helsing finally kills Dracula in a showdown during the next full moon.
Anna injects Van Helsing with the antidote to the werewolf curse, which Dracula keeps in his castle to protect himself, and Van Helsing reverts to a human after unwittingly killing Anna. Frankenstein's monster sails off into the sunset. Van Helsing burns Anna's body in a funeral pyre, and sees a vision of her entering Paradise with her ancestors. Image:The Wolfman from Van Helsing.JPG
Notes
The film contains numerous homages to the Universal Studios horror films of the 1930s and 1940s, particularly those featuring Dracula, Frankenstein's Monster, and the Wolf Man. A poem/legend specifically written for The Wolf Man is quoted verbatim in this film.
Although this film is an homage to the Universal monster series, it breaks a cardinal rule by referring to Frankenstein's Monster directly by the name "Frankenstein", although in the context of this film, The Monster clearly considers himself to be Frankenstein's son. This difference is further borne out in an additional scene in the film's tie-in novel, in which the Monster specifically tells Van Helsing to call him Frankenstein.
Shuler Hensley, who plays Frankenstein's Monster in the film, also provided motion capture reference for the CGI-animated Mr. Hyde in the opening sequence.
The film is promoted to be the first that features all three monsters simultaneously. However the 1987 teen move The Monster Squad also featured them, plus the mummy.
This film's Mr. Hyde looks very similar, but smaller than, to that shown in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. (In the original novel, Hyde was 'smaller' than Jekyll, though as he slowly took over, Hyde grew in size.)
In Bram Stoker's original novel, Dracula, and many subsequent films based on it, it is Dr. Abraham Van Helsing, an elderly anthropology professor from the Netherlands who does the vampire hunting.
The heroine's family name, Valerious, may or may not be an indirect reference to the novel Phantom of the Opera, which has two minor supporting characters, a deceased music professor and his wife, with a family name of Valerius (spelled without the "o"). The novel was adapted by Universal Studios into a silent film released in 1925.
Many fans have noted that Dracula refers to Van Helsing as "Gabriel" several times during the film, strongly implying that Van Helsing's real first name is Gabriel, and in both the "London Assignment" animated prequel and in the film's tie-in novel, Van Helsing introduces himself as "Gabriel Van Helsing". In addition, there are a couple of hints during the movie (even Dracula implies it during the final battle) that Van Helsing may be the angel Gabriel. In the film, the one who murdered Dracula four hundred years ago is not named, but merely referred to as the "Left Hand of God", a title that is ascribed to the archangel Gabriel in some Christian traditions. Notice that this change of name would allow filmmakers to keep the rights of this new, different character for any possible sequel.
Kate Beckinsale is becoming an old hand at fighting vampires, as she played a very similar character (albeit a vampire) in 2003's Underworld.
Fans of the Japanese manga comic Hellsing, which was published several years before Van Helsing was produced have noted numerous similarities between it and the movie -- for example, both feature Van Helsing/Hellsing as an action hero fighting Dracula and both worked for the church despite different denominations (Anime Hellsing fought for the Protestant Church, possibly Anglican but Van Helsing fought for is an ecumenical church group (imans and Orthodox Priests can be seen at the group's base, and Allah is referred to as well as God, though the members Van Helsing interacts with seem to be Catholic) -- but it appears the similarities are coincidental.
Despite a production budget of over $160 million, plus an estimated $50 million spent on marketing, and a U.S. box office of $120 million (presumed somewhat poor by industry standards), the film might be considered a bomb. However, the film did well overseas, with an international box office of $180 million, for a total of just over $300 million worldwide. It was also a surprising success in its DVD release, making over $65 million in unit sales the first week alone, and over $140 million in total DVD and video sales thus far. As a result, the film has actually made a respectably large profit. A sequel is reportedly in talks for 2007 or 2008. However, Hugh Jackman is currently occupied with the production of X-Men 3, as well as a spin-off film, which is also centered around his character Wolverine.
Other media
Sommers expanded the story of Van Helsing in two direct spin-offs. The animated prequel titled Van Helsing: The London Assignment, takes place before the main events of the film, focusing on Van Helsing's first mission to try to end a Jack-the-Ripper-style murderer, who turns out to be Mr. Hyde, from terrorizing London. There was also a one-issue comic book titled Van Helsing: From Beneath the Rue Morgue, that follows Van Helsing on a self-contained adventure that occurs during the events of the film, just after the death of Jekyll/Hyde in Paris but before Van Helsing returns to Rome. This is probably based on Edgar Allan Poe's short story Murders in the Rue Morgue
A spin-off television series, titled Transylvania, was also going to be produced, using the film's village sets, but due to poor US box-office and critical panning the series' status is currently unknown. The series was to be set in the late 1880s, the same period as the film, and was reportedly to focus on the story of a Texas cowboy who becomes sheriff in a Transylvanian village, where he must keep the peace between two warring familes with some "monsterous genes". Sommers wrote the pilot and supervised six episode scripts.
Vivendi Universal Games also published a Van Helsing video game for PlayStation 2, Xbox and Game Boy Advance. The game follows a similar plot to the movie and the PS2 and Xbox versions feature the voice talent of many of the actors including Hugh Jackman and Richard Roxburgh.
Fans of the Castlevania game-series have attempted to draw parallels between the movie and the games in a similar fashion Monkey Island fans have attempted to draw connections with Pirates of the Caribbean. The game-adaption of the movie includes a reference to a Transylvanian family called Belmont which is also the family from which most protagonists of Castlevania originate from.
Main cast
- Hugh Jackman ... as Gabriel Van Helsing
- Kate Beckinsale ... as Anna Valerious
- Richard Roxburgh ... as Count Vladislaus Dracula
- David Wenham ... as Carl
- Will Kemp ... as Velkan Valerious/ The Wolfman
- Shuler Hensley ... as Frankenstein's Monster
- Elena Anaya ... as Aleera, a bride of Dracula
- Silvia Colloca ... as Verona, a bride of Dracula
- Josie Maran ... as Marishka, a bride of Dracula
- Kevin J. O'Connor ... as Igor
- Samuel West ... as Dr. Victor Frankenstein
- Robbie Coltrane ... as Mr. Edward Hyde (voice)
See also
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen


