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|writer = [[Yoshiaki Kawajiri]]
 
|writer = [[Yoshiaki Kawajiri]]
 
|music = Marco D'Ambrosio
 
|music = Marco D'Ambrosio
|distributor = Urban Vision Entertainment
+
|distributor = <small>Urban Vision Entertainment<br>Nippon Herald Films<br> Discotek Media<br>Avex Entertainment</small>
|release date = 2000
+
|release date =<small> 2000(Unfinished version)<br>September 23, 2001(Completed)</small>
 
|runtime = 97 minutes
 
|runtime = 97 minutes
 
|language = Japanese, English
 
|language = Japanese, English
|preceded by = [[Vampire Hunter D (1985 OVA)]]
+
|preceded by = [[Vampire Hunter D (1985 OVA)|VHD 1985 Ova]]
}}The second animated feature is based on the third novel, [[Demon Deathchase]].
+
}}'''''Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust '''''(ハンターD ブラッドラスト ''Banpaia Hantā Dī: Buraddorasuto'') is a 2000 anime film, and is the second animated Vampire Hunter D feature. The film is based on the third novel of [[Hideyuki Kikuchi's Vampire Hunter D|Hideyuki Kikuchi's&nbsp;''Vampire Hunter D'']] series, ''[[Demon Deathchase]]''.
  +
  +
The film began production in 1997 and was completed with the intention of being shown in American theaters. It was shown in twelve theaters across the United States and received generally positive reception from American critics.
  +
  +
Unlike most anime features, English was ''Bloodlust's'' initially recorded dialogue track, and was later dubbed in Japanese.
  +
 
==Synopsis==
 
==Synopsis==
[[D|'''D''']] has been hired to track down [[Meier Link]], a notoriously powerful vampire who has abducted a Human woman, [[Charlotte Elbourne]]. '''D''''s orders are strict - find Charlotte, at any cost. For the first time, '''D '''faces serious competition. The [[Marcus Clan|Markus Brothers]], a family of [[Vampire Hunter]]s, were hired for the same bounty. '''D '''must intercept Meire and conquer hostile forces on all sides in a deadly race against time. Despised by [[Vampires]] for his profession and by Humans for the blood in his veins, '''D '''relentlessly pursues his prey for a price.
+
[[D|'''D''']] has been hired to track down [[Meier Link]], a notoriously powerful vampire who has abducted a human woman, [[Charlotte Elbourne]]. '''D''''s orders are strict - find Charlotte, at any cost. For the first time, '''D '''faces serious competition. The [[Marcus Clan|Marcus Brothers]], a family of [[Vampire Hunter]]s, were hired for the same bounty. '''D '''must intercept Meier and conquer hostile forces on all sides in a deadly race against time. Despised by [[Vampires]] for his profession and by Humans for the blood in his veins, '''D '''relentlessly pursues his prey for a price.
  +
  +
==Plot==
  +
[[Charlotte]], a young woman, is abducted by Baron [[Meier Link]], a vampire [[noble]]man who is known not to harm humans needlessly. Charlotte's father, [[Father/John Elbourne|John Elboune]], hires [[D]], a [[dhampir]], to find her and rescue her, and alternatively, kill her humanely if she's been turned into a vampire. He offers D $500,000 as a down payment, and offers him $10mil if he carries out the job. D has Elbourne double the payment, and agrees to search for Charlotte.
  +
  +
At the same time, Charlotte's older brother, [[Alan Elbourne]], hires another group of vampire hunters, the notorious [[Marcus Brothers]], composed of the leader [[Borgoff]], a hulking man named [[Nolt]], a blade master named [[Kyle]], a physically disabled psychic named [[Grove]], and a woman named [[Leila]] who hunts vampires because of a personal grudge rather than for monetary gain. The two parties (D and the Marcus brothers) race inexorably after Meier Link. However, Meier Link hires the [[mutant]] [[Barbarois]]; a group of lethal mercenary body guards. They consist of [[Caroline]], a shape shifter; [[Benge]], a shadow manipulator; and [[Machira]], a werewolf.
  +
  +
Throughout the course of the film, two of the Marcus brothers, Nolt and Kyle, end up being killed by the mutant Barbarois, while Leila and Borgoff continue their search for Charlotte.
  +
  +
As the story progresses, Meier Link's abduction of Charlotte turns out to not be as it seemed, as it's revealed that Charlotte willingly ran away with Meier Link as his lover. Charlotte rightfully feared that no one would understand their relationship, with her a human and Link a vampire.
  +
  +
Throughout their search, and after both characters save each other from seeming death at separate points, D has a conversation with Leila, where she reveals that she hunts vampires because a vampire killed her mother. D tells her that he hunts vampires as he has no other choice as a dhampir, and she can have a life that someone like him could never have; the life of a normal human. Leila, having not exactly taken the life of a normal human, instead being a vampire hunter, fears that no one will mourn her death when that time comes. She make a pact with D, that if either one of them survives, the survivor will bring flowers to the other's grave. D admits that he does not expect himself to survive the bounty hunt, after coming so close to death.
  +
  +
In the final act of the film, Meier Link transports Charlotte in his carriage to the [[Castle of Chaythe]], where [[Carmilla|Countess&nbsp;Carmilla]], Meier Link's matron, waits for them. Carmilla, a ghost of a vampire who died long ago, reigned supreme within the Castle of Chaythe when vampires were all-powerful and unchallenged. However, her bloodlust was so strong that D's father, an ancient, noble [[Vampire King|vampire king]], killed her in disgust. Carmilla promises Meier Link and Charlotte travel to a far away city known as the City of The Night, where they can be free to love each other, which they will travel to in a large and ancient spaceship-like structure hidden beneath the Castle of Chaythe. Carmilla explains that most ancient castles had similar ships hidden within them, and that back when vampires reigned supreme, these ships weren't an uncommon means for vampires to travel to far regions. Carmilla notes that the ship is old and hasn't flown in a long time, and that she doesn't know if the ship will fly safely, but that Meier Link and Charlotte are allowed to take that risk, if they so wish.
  +
  +
D and the remaining Marcus Brothers separately trail Meier Link to the Castle of Chaythe, and as they enter the castle in their search for Charlotte, Carmilla plays psychological tricks on them. Borgoff, for example, is shown Nolt and Kyle, the dead members of the Marcus brothers, returning to life. Borgoff ends up also being killed in his surprised and ecstatic state by Carmilla's ghost, and it turns out Nolt and Kyle never returned to life at all. This leaves Leila as the only surviving member of the Marcus brothers as she continues her search for Charlotte inside the castle.
  +
  +
Carmilla manipulates D's mind, and shows him a vision of his mother, in which she apologizes to D for birthing him as a dhampir, and states that she couldn't help it as she was a human in love with D's vampire father, and attempts to explain that humans are capable of loving vampires. D strikes this vision of his mother down with his sword and returns to a normal state.
  +
  +
In a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plot_twist plot twist], Carmilla turns on Meier Link and Charlotte, as Carmilla had actually plotted to kill Charlotte all along, with the reasoning being that Carmilla needed the blood of a virgin to leave her ghostly, ethereal form and return to life. D destroys Carmilla's ghost just as Carmilla is performing the ritual and draining Charlotte of her blood. D, still with a job to do in bringing Charlotte safely back home, engages Meier Link in battle, as Meier Link doesn't want D to take his lover away from him. D stabs Meier Link through the chest with his sword, but not through his heart, injuring Meier Link but allowing him to live. During their encounter, Charlotte has passed away due to the ritual that Carmilla had been performing previously, and D takes the ring off of her finger as proof of her death to bring back to Elbourne, as he ceases battle with Meier Link.
  +
  +
D, along with Leila, make their leave of the Castle of Chaythe, and allow Meier Link to leave for the City of the Night in the Castle of Chaythe's ship with Charlotte's corpse on board. D and Leila agree to ride back into town together on D's horse, as Leila jokingly tells D that the reward is rightfully hers, but this time, she'll allow him to have it. Before riding off, they watch in the distance as the ship hidden underneath the castle takes to the skies with Charlotte's corpse and Meier Link inside.
  +
  +
In the final scene of the movie, D arrives at Leila's funeral, watching her loved ones mourn from a distance. Many decades have passed since all of the previous events, as a little girl revealed to be [[Leila's granddaughter]] approaches and greets D, and invites him to stay with her family for a while. D declines, saying that he simply came to "repay a favor to an old friend, who feared no one would mourn her death." D admits that he was glad she was wrong. The girl thanks him, and D replies by smiling gently at her, and leaves.
  +
  +
==Cast==
  +
{| class="wikitable"
  +
|-
  +
! Character !! English Voice Actor !! Japanese Voice Actor
  +
|-
  +
! [[D]]
  +
| Andy Philpot || Hideyuki Tanaka
  +
|-
  +
! [[Left Hand]]
  +
| Mike McShane || Ichirō Nagai
  +
|-
  +
! [[Meier Link]]
  +
| John Rafter Lee|| Kōichi Yamadera
  +
|-
  +
! [[Charlotte Elbourne]]
  +
| Wendee Lee || Emi Shinohara
  +
|-
  +
! [[Leila Marcus]]
  +
| Pamela Adlon || Megumi Hayashibara<br />Akiko Yajima (young)
  +
|-
  +
! [[Borgoff Marcus]]
  +
| Matt McKenzie || Yūsaku Yara
  +
|-
  +
! [[Kyle Marcus]]
  +
| Alex Fernandez || Hōchū Ōtsuka
  +
|-
  +
! [[Grove Marcus]]
  +
| Jack Fletcher || Toshihiko Seki
  +
|-
  +
! [[Nolt Marcus]]
  +
| John DiMaggio || Ryūzaburō Ōtomo
  +
|-
  +
! [[Barbarois Elder]]
  +
| Dwight Schultz || Chikao Ōtsuka
  +
|-
  +
! [[Polk]]
  +
| John Hostetter || Takeshi Aono
  +
|-
  +
! [[Father|John Elbourne]]
  +
| John DiMaggio || Motomu Kiyokawa
  +
|-
  +
! [[Alan Elbourne]]
  +
| John DeMita || Kōji Tsujitani
  +
|-
  +
! [[Mashira]]
  +
| John DiMaggio || Rintarō Nishi
  +
|-
  +
! [[Caroline]]
  +
| Mary Elizabeth McGlynn || Yoko Sōmi
  +
|-
  +
! [[Bengé]]
  +
| Dwight Schultz || Keiji Fujiwara
  +
|-
  +
! [[Sheriff of Garucia|Sheriff]]
  +
| John DiMaggio || Rikiya Koyama
  +
|-
  +
! [[Leila's granddaughter]]
  +
| Debi Derryberry || Mika Kanai
  +
|-
  +
! Priest
  +
| John DiMaggio || Unshō Ishizuka
  +
|-
  +
! [[Carmilla]]
  +
| Julia Fletcher || Bibari Maeda
  +
|-
  +
! [[Mina the Fair|D's Mother]]
  +
| || Chiharu Suzuka
  +
|}
  +
  +
== Reception ==
  +
The film received generally favorable reviews from American critics, it received a rating of 62 on the website Metacritic.<ref>http://www.metacritic.com/movie/vampire-hunter-d/critic-reviews</ref> The ''Chicago Reader'' gave a favorable review of the film, referring to it as a "gorgeously animated surrealist adventure".<ref>http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/vampire-hunter-d-bloodlust/Film?oid=1054204</ref> The ''New York Daily News'' referred to the film as "Beautiful, witty and provocative" and that it should "appeal to fans and non-fans alike".<ref>http://www.metacritic.com/movie/vampire-hunter-d/critic-reviews</ref> The ''San Francisco Chronicle'' praised the director Yoshiaki Kawajiri stating that he "has a gift for striking visuals" but also noted that "his story manages to be simultaneously thin and chaotic."<ref>http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/10/05/DD52511.DTL&ao=3</ref>
  +
 
==Differences between book and film==
 
==Differences between book and film==
 
There are quite a few things that were changed around in the making of Bloodlust. Here are a few examples:
 
There are quite a few things that were changed around in the making of Bloodlust. Here are a few examples:
Line 19: Line 120:
 
-The daughter's name is given ([[Charlotte Elbourne]]).
 
-The daughter's name is given ([[Charlotte Elbourne]]).
   
-The removed the fact that the [[Markus brothers]] were raping [[Leila]].
+
-They removed the fact that the [[Marcus Brothers]] were raping [[Leila]].
   
- [[Mayerling]] is now Meier Link.
+
- [[Mayerling]] is now [[Meier Link]] .
   
 
-The addition of [[Carmilla]] who was originally not in the novel at all.
 
-The addition of [[Carmilla]] who was originally not in the novel at all.
   
-And as most people might already know, the movie uses the translation dunpeal instead of dhampir.
+
-And as most people might already know, the movie uses the translation dunpeal instead of [[dhampir]] .
   
 
-The ending is also different in that there's no [[Carmilla]] and also how things end for [[Mayerling]] and [[Charlotte]].
 
-The ending is also different in that there's no [[Carmilla]] and also how things end for [[Mayerling]] and [[Charlotte]].
  +
==Sketches/Production Art==
  +
<gallery>
  +
plcover_full.jpg
  +
albournes.jpg
  +
benge_caroline.jpg
  +
borgoff_nolt.jpg
  +
xxxxx.jpg
  +
charlotte.jpg
  +
d_hand_horse.jpg
  +
d_sword.jpg
  +
girls_dmother (1).jpg
  +
kyle_grove.jpg
  +
leila.jpg
  +
machira_barbaroids.jpg
  +
meier_carriage.jpg
  +
colour_1.jpg
  +
colour_2_3.jpg
  +
colour_4_5.jpg
  +
colour_4_5.jpg
  +
</gallery>
  +
  +
== Reference List ==
  +
<references />
   
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
Line 33: Line 157:
 
*{{Imdb|url=title/tt0216651/|text=''Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust''}}
 
*{{Imdb|url=title/tt0216651/|text=''Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust''}}
 
[[Category:Animation]]
 
[[Category:Animation]]
  +
[[Category:Anime]]

Revision as of 01:55, 17 May 2020

Bloodlust2
Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust
Director(s)

Yoshiaki Kawajiri

Writer(s)

Yoshiaki Kawajiri

Music by

Marco D'Ambrosio

Distributor

Urban Vision Entertainment
Nippon Herald Films
Discotek Media
Avex Entertainment

Released

2000(Unfinished version)
September 23, 2001(Completed)

Runtime

97 minutes

Language

Japanese, English

Preceded by

VHD 1985 Ova

Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust (ハンターD ブラッドラスト Banpaia Hantā Dī: Buraddorasuto) is a 2000 anime film, and is the second animated Vampire Hunter D feature. The film is based on the third novel of Hideyuki Kikuchi's Vampire Hunter D series, Demon Deathchase.

The film began production in 1997 and was completed with the intention of being shown in American theaters. It was shown in twelve theaters across the United States and received generally positive reception from American critics.

Unlike most anime features, English was Bloodlust's initially recorded dialogue track, and was later dubbed in Japanese.

Synopsis

D has been hired to track down Meier Link, a notoriously powerful vampire who has abducted a human woman, Charlotte Elbourne. D's orders are strict - find Charlotte, at any cost. For the first time, D faces serious competition. The Marcus Brothers, a family of Vampire Hunters, were hired for the same bounty. D must intercept Meier and conquer hostile forces on all sides in a deadly race against time. Despised by Vampires for his profession and by Humans for the blood in his veins, D relentlessly pursues his prey for a price.

Plot

Charlotte, a young woman, is abducted by Baron Meier Link, a vampire nobleman who is known not to harm humans needlessly. Charlotte's father, John Elboune, hires D, a dhampir, to find her and rescue her, and alternatively, kill her humanely if she's been turned into a vampire. He offers D $500,000 as a down payment, and offers him $10mil if he carries out the job. D has Elbourne double the payment, and agrees to search for Charlotte.

At the same time, Charlotte's older brother, Alan Elbourne, hires another group of vampire hunters, the notorious Marcus Brothers, composed of the leader Borgoff, a hulking man named Nolt, a blade master named Kyle, a physically disabled psychic named Grove, and a woman named Leila who hunts vampires because of a personal grudge rather than for monetary gain. The two parties (D and the Marcus brothers) race inexorably after Meier Link. However, Meier Link hires the mutant Barbarois; a group of lethal mercenary body guards. They consist of Caroline, a shape shifter; Benge, a shadow manipulator; and Machira, a werewolf.

Throughout the course of the film, two of the Marcus brothers, Nolt and Kyle, end up being killed by the mutant Barbarois, while Leila and Borgoff continue their search for Charlotte.

As the story progresses, Meier Link's abduction of Charlotte turns out to not be as it seemed, as it's revealed that Charlotte willingly ran away with Meier Link as his lover. Charlotte rightfully feared that no one would understand their relationship, with her a human and Link a vampire.

Throughout their search, and after both characters save each other from seeming death at separate points, D has a conversation with Leila, where she reveals that she hunts vampires because a vampire killed her mother. D tells her that he hunts vampires as he has no other choice as a dhampir, and she can have a life that someone like him could never have; the life of a normal human. Leila, having not exactly taken the life of a normal human, instead being a vampire hunter, fears that no one will mourn her death when that time comes. She make a pact with D, that if either one of them survives, the survivor will bring flowers to the other's grave. D admits that he does not expect himself to survive the bounty hunt, after coming so close to death.

In the final act of the film, Meier Link transports Charlotte in his carriage to the Castle of Chaythe, where Countess Carmilla, Meier Link's matron, waits for them. Carmilla, a ghost of a vampire who died long ago, reigned supreme within the Castle of Chaythe when vampires were all-powerful and unchallenged. However, her bloodlust was so strong that D's father, an ancient, noble vampire king, killed her in disgust. Carmilla promises Meier Link and Charlotte travel to a far away city known as the City of The Night, where they can be free to love each other, which they will travel to in a large and ancient spaceship-like structure hidden beneath the Castle of Chaythe. Carmilla explains that most ancient castles had similar ships hidden within them, and that back when vampires reigned supreme, these ships weren't an uncommon means for vampires to travel to far regions. Carmilla notes that the ship is old and hasn't flown in a long time, and that she doesn't know if the ship will fly safely, but that Meier Link and Charlotte are allowed to take that risk, if they so wish.

D and the remaining Marcus Brothers separately trail Meier Link to the Castle of Chaythe, and as they enter the castle in their search for Charlotte, Carmilla plays psychological tricks on them. Borgoff, for example, is shown Nolt and Kyle, the dead members of the Marcus brothers, returning to life. Borgoff ends up also being killed in his surprised and ecstatic state by Carmilla's ghost, and it turns out Nolt and Kyle never returned to life at all. This leaves Leila as the only surviving member of the Marcus brothers as she continues her search for Charlotte inside the castle.

Carmilla manipulates D's mind, and shows him a vision of his mother, in which she apologizes to D for birthing him as a dhampir, and states that she couldn't help it as she was a human in love with D's vampire father, and attempts to explain that humans are capable of loving vampires. D strikes this vision of his mother down with his sword and returns to a normal state.

In a plot twist, Carmilla turns on Meier Link and Charlotte, as Carmilla had actually plotted to kill Charlotte all along, with the reasoning being that Carmilla needed the blood of a virgin to leave her ghostly, ethereal form and return to life. D destroys Carmilla's ghost just as Carmilla is performing the ritual and draining Charlotte of her blood. D, still with a job to do in bringing Charlotte safely back home, engages Meier Link in battle, as Meier Link doesn't want D to take his lover away from him. D stabs Meier Link through the chest with his sword, but not through his heart, injuring Meier Link but allowing him to live. During their encounter, Charlotte has passed away due to the ritual that Carmilla had been performing previously, and D takes the ring off of her finger as proof of her death to bring back to Elbourne, as he ceases battle with Meier Link.

D, along with Leila, make their leave of the Castle of Chaythe, and allow Meier Link to leave for the City of the Night in the Castle of Chaythe's ship with Charlotte's corpse on board. D and Leila agree to ride back into town together on D's horse, as Leila jokingly tells D that the reward is rightfully hers, but this time, she'll allow him to have it. Before riding off, they watch in the distance as the ship hidden underneath the castle takes to the skies with Charlotte's corpse and Meier Link inside.

In the final scene of the movie, D arrives at Leila's funeral, watching her loved ones mourn from a distance. Many decades have passed since all of the previous events, as a little girl revealed to be Leila's granddaughter approaches and greets D, and invites him to stay with her family for a while. D declines, saying that he simply came to "repay a favor to an old friend, who feared no one would mourn her death." D admits that he was glad she was wrong. The girl thanks him, and D replies by smiling gently at her, and leaves.

Cast

Character English Voice Actor Japanese Voice Actor
D Andy Philpot Hideyuki Tanaka
Left Hand Mike McShane Ichirō Nagai
Meier Link John Rafter Lee Kōichi Yamadera
Charlotte Elbourne Wendee Lee Emi Shinohara
Leila Marcus Pamela Adlon Megumi Hayashibara
Akiko Yajima (young)
Borgoff Marcus Matt McKenzie Yūsaku Yara
Kyle Marcus Alex Fernandez Hōchū Ōtsuka
Grove Marcus Jack Fletcher Toshihiko Seki
Nolt Marcus John DiMaggio Ryūzaburō Ōtomo
Barbarois Elder Dwight Schultz Chikao Ōtsuka
Polk John Hostetter Takeshi Aono
John Elbourne John DiMaggio Motomu Kiyokawa
Alan Elbourne John DeMita Kōji Tsujitani
Mashira John DiMaggio Rintarō Nishi
Caroline Mary Elizabeth McGlynn Yoko Sōmi
Bengé Dwight Schultz Keiji Fujiwara
Sheriff John DiMaggio Rikiya Koyama
Leila's granddaughter Debi Derryberry Mika Kanai
Priest John DiMaggio Unshō Ishizuka
Carmilla Julia Fletcher Bibari Maeda
D's Mother Chiharu Suzuka

Reception

The film received generally favorable reviews from American critics, it received a rating of 62 on the website Metacritic.[1] The Chicago Reader gave a favorable review of the film, referring to it as a "gorgeously animated surrealist adventure".[2] The New York Daily News referred to the film as "Beautiful, witty and provocative" and that it should "appeal to fans and non-fans alike".[3] The San Francisco Chronicle praised the director Yoshiaki Kawajiri stating that he "has a gift for striking visuals" but also noted that "his story manages to be simultaneously thin and chaotic."[4]

Differences between book and film

There are quite a few things that were changed around in the making of Bloodlust. Here are a few examples:

-The daughter's name is given (Charlotte Elbourne).

-They removed the fact that the Marcus Brothers were raping Leila.

- Mayerling is now Meier Link .

-The addition of Carmilla who was originally not in the novel at all.

-And as most people might already know, the movie uses the translation dunpeal instead of dhampir .

-The ending is also different in that there's no Carmilla and also how things end for Mayerling and Charlotte.

Sketches/Production Art

Reference List

External links