Sei in: Cinema e Medioevo ® Vampiria. Tutti i film sui vampiri ® I film in ordine alfabetico (1896-oggi) |
Hamlet the Vampire Slayer
2008, regia di Jason Witter
Scheda: Nazione: USA - Produzione: Jason Witter - Soggetto: Jason Witter, Aaron Frale - Sceneggiatura: Jason Witter, Aaron Frale - Fotografia: Scott Bryan - Montaggio: Scott Bryan - Musiche: Scott Bryan - Formato: Color - Durata: 85'.
Cast:
Kevin R. Elder,
Leslie Nesbit, Doug Montoya,
Summer Olsson, George Bach, Andy Brooks,
Steve Lucero,
Daniel T. Cornish, Scott Bryan,
Ethan Moya.
Plot Summary, Synopsis, Review:
IMDb
-
vampire-movies.co.uk
-
wontchangetheworld.com
-
thatguywiththeglasses.com
-
clicker.com
-
taliesinttlg.blogspot.it: «I
should hate it. By all that is right in films this should go straight to the
bottom of the pile. Take Hamlet and then throw in a right royal splash of
Buffy the
Vampire Slayer. Film it on a budget so small that micro
seems too big a description and then you have... Actually you have something
that, as long as you know it’s going to be a ‘B’ movie, actually works rather
well. Shot in Black and White (bar a couple of colour scenes) and lifting the
Hamlet story in a completely recognisable way we have… Let’s start at the
beginning and Horatio (George Bach) tells us that once in every generation…
actually I’m guessing you know the speech. There has to be three takes as Hamlet
(Kevin R Elder) is clearly not a female. Though he does want to be a male
cheerleader. Cut to a girl, tooling up and hunting vampires, it would seem, down
the local Goth club. Yet, after the killing she states that vampire’s do not
exist – unlucky for her as Enrique Claudio (Doug Montoya) is there and he is a
vampire. The gatekeepers are role playing geeks, the ghost (Elias Lee Francis IV)
of Hamlet’s dad less floats around and more trudges, before telling Hamlet that
his mother’s, Gertrude (Summer Olsson), new Latin lover… his own brother… is a
vampire and killed him. Laertes (Chet Stillwood) is off to cheer-camp – though
Polonius (Steve Lucero) wants him to go to military school. Ophelia (Leslie
Nesbit) is vapid. ... The gravediggers are actually robbing graves to create a
zombie army featuring singing zombies. There is the occasional poo gag that we
could have done without because the audacity of what Witter created was just so
bizarre that faeces jokes seemed more puerile than normal and rather redundant.
The duel between Hamlet and Laertes is actually a cheer-off with a poisoned
pom-pom. I kid you not. The acting is better than you would expect, for the most
part. The core actors seemed comfortable in their roles, dialogue – modern,
Buffy-speak or Shakespearian actually being delivered well. Ophelia bugged – but
I am guessing that she was meant to. However there were moments that were
genuinely funny. The self-effacing voice-overs and intertitles showed filmmakers
who knew just how cheeky they were being. ...».