Ultraviolet (2006) Review

By Marco Chacon   X Formly Known as Twitter
4 Min Read
In a future where technology can compress dimensional space, where motorcycles can ride on the walls, where pathogen-created vampires can kill rooms full of people in the blink of an eye, there is still one area mankind's immense progress has been unable to cover:

The bellybutton.


Ultraviolet
I gave Munich a hard time. I loved Ultraviolet. Either the world is just not  fair or I have bad taste. I know what you're thinking: "It's the taste one, Marco"--but let me give you a little test, there, spanky: Call and ask your mom if the world is fair.

I'll wait. You can get back to me.

Thought so.

Ultraviolet is, unabashedly, a comic-book movie. No, there is no real UV comicbook despite the various geners of UV comic shown durring the credits. It is, however, shooting for the same vibe: primary colors, not-quite-convincing iconic CGI (the bio-weapons lab looks like a giant complext in the shape of the Biohazard spider). The action is way over the top.

Here is the story:
Evil nasty, quasi-religious global-health-overlord Ferdinand, wages a dirty (yet, paradoxically, very hygienic) war against the vampires (those infected with the hemophage virus) who move like the guys from Equilibrium, act like the homeless people from Bladerunner, and have advanced technology and high-altitude "bomber planes" despite having the social-infrastructure of a street gang.

The ultimate weapon of the hemophages is Violet, a woman who Lost. Her. Child. (forced abortion by evil-state when she was infected). She has super-reflexes, super strength, hair that changes color, is totally hawt, and carries a katana. And guns. But she has a katana.

When she gets her hands on the "ultimate weapon" that Ferdinand has created, it turns out to be a character and her maternal instincts kick in and she protects it and seeks revenge for it.

Finally, push comes to shove and she kills a whole lot of people.

Here is what Ultraviolet teaches us:
1. In the future, the meaning of the word "Vampire" has been soddomized to near non-existence. You get infected. You get teeth. You get strong and fast. You're "dying." You need transfusions. If you bleed on someone they become a vampire. Or something. Apparently vampires who want to infect people have a hard time doing so and need to break into giant bloodbanks or something. And yet. One drop of vampire blood and people are infected. WTF? Who cares--Munich was supposed to make sense. Ultraviolet was not.

2. There is shockingly high technology. Rooms fold up inside other rooms. You can drive on the walls. You can demateralize weapons. This is all, actually, very cool. Let me tell you the coolest part though: Violet needs to make a call so she goes to a vending machine and prints out a paper, disposable cell phone.

That's right: a paper (so thin, it folds), disposable (limited use), cell phone. Somewhere a script writer is doing this action scene where Violet, is, again, surrounded at close range by synchronized swimmers with machine guns*, who just. won't. pull. the. trigger. He's going "Yeah! This is so cool! Then you hear the shhhink-sound and they all stand there for a heart beat--and then they fall over! Rocking! Then she rides her motorcycle straight up the wall like Ghostrider."

And he thinks for a moment and then goes "And in the future ... I think market drivers will create a super-thin form-factor planned-obselescence cell phone using sub-micon printed circuts that we see being developed for fabric-wearable computing. HEY! I'll put those in my movie too!"

He's probably right.

3. Future people know what we, ourselves, will not actually admit: Katanas are cool on some elemental level. If you want to be really bad, you must have both a machine gun* and a katana. If you tell me that UV's straight blade is "not actually a katana" I will advise a regimine of punching yourself in the groin.

What would happen if a hemophage and a grammeton cleric fought?

Ultraviolet vs. Munich
Ultraviolet is over-the-top action with helicopters firing chain guns into skyscrapers. Munich has guys with feminine little European automatics shooting bullets into grocery bags.
ADVANTAGE: Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet's hair changes color! Munich has 70's hair.
ADVANTAGE: Ultraviolet

Ultraviolet hits a lot of the wrong notes for its drama (the kid isn't especially loveable, there's a scene where UV explains tattoos on her hands we cannot really see, the movie is so loaded with CGI it often looks plastic, the strategy of UV seems seems to be: I was kinda pissed before and just fought with you--now that I am *really* mad, I'm just going to kill everyone who gets in my way). Munich hits all the right notes with its drama. This leaves us with a naked lesbian assassin drooling blood.

ADVANTAGE: Tie

Ultraviolet is sometimes smart (paper phones). Munich is always smart.
ADVANTAGE: Munich

Ultraviolet is often dumb (why do the security forces shoot the wrong kid when, presumably, they want the right one alive). Munich is never dumb.
ADVANTAGE: Munich

Ultraviolet has a ton of CGI buildings. Munich's message hinges on two CGI buildings.
ADVANTAGE: Tie

Ultraviolet proves that Dinero in Ronin was right: if you surround your target with gunmen they will inevitably shoot each other. Munich has learned nothing from Ronin.
ADVANTAGE: Ultraviolet.

Ultraviolet is 88 minutes long. Munich? 168.
ADVANTAGE: Ultraviolet.

FINAL SCORE
Ultraviolet: 6
Munich: 4

Winner: Ultraviolet. Keep trying, Stevie. We know you've got another Jurassic Park 2 in you somewhere.
* I do actually know the difference between a sub-machine gun, assault rifle, and machine gun. Sue me.
Cast:
Directed By:
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Running Time: 94 minutes
Distributed By: Screen Gems

Stream from Amazon Prime
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Purchase Ultraviolet from the iTunes store.
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Watch on Apple TV
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Stream on Vudu / Fandango
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For more information about Ultraviolet visit the FlickDirect Movie Database. For more reviews by Marco Chacon please click here.

Ultraviolet images are courtesy of Screen Gems. All Rights Reserved.


FlickDirect, Marco  Chacon

Exposed to radioactive films early on, Marco Chacon has gained proportional strength and agility, though it hasn't been useful. On the internet, opinions hold sway over facts, and Marco is no exception, often possessing multiple, conflicting views. Marco is also the author of the JAGS Roleplaying Gaming System.




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