As the war between the vampires and the Lycans rages on, Selene, a former member of the Death Dealers (an elite vampire special forces unit that hunts werewolves), and Michael, the werewolf hybrid, work together in an effort to unlock the secrets of their respective bloodlines.
Kate Beckinsale
Selene
Scott Speedman
Michael Corvin
Tony Curran
Marcus Corvinus
Shane Brolly
Kraven
Derek Jacobi
Alexander Corvinus
Bill Nighy
Viktor
Steven Mackintosh
Andreas Tanis
Zita Görög
Amelia
Brian Steele
William Corvinus
John Mann
Samuel
Scott McElroy
Soren
Michael Sheen
Lucian
Sophia Myles
Erika
Richard Cetrone
Pierce
Mike Mukatis
Taylor
Raoul Ganeev
Truck Driver
Andrew Kavadas
Selene's Father
Kayla Levins
Selene's Sister
Attila Lovaghy
Tavern Cop #1
Monica Hamburg
Newscaster
Travis Webster
Cleaner
Kaja Gjesdal
Tanis Vamp #2
Lily Mo Sheen
Young Selene
Adrian Hough
Pilot
Michasha Armstrong
Gunner
Krsy Fox
Tanis Vamp #1
Julius Chapple
French Cleaner Aide
Director, Characters, Story
Len Wiseman
Characters
Kevin Grevioux
Characters, Screenplay, Story
Danny McBride
Story Editor
Monica Sandstede
October 21, 2015
7
Oh Brother!
The sequel to cult fave Underworld (2003) finds vampire warrior Selene (Kate Beckinsale) and half werewolf Michael (Scott Speedman) unravelling the truth about their respective blood lines. Just what caused the feud between the vampires and the lycans?
Unsurprisingly reviews for this sequel are mixed, it's either a smart action popcorner that was warranted, or it's a huge let down after the first film. Personally I'm in the first camp, personally because it does pretty much the same things, only the story has a bit of complexity about it to try and bluff us that it's cerebral.
For a film about vampires and werewolves at war it delivers all that is required in the modern era. There's lots of high energy action, blood and guts galore, CGI overdrive, fast pacing and a sexy lead actress fronting the piece. The story ticks along nicely, introducing new and interesting characters, while flashbacks fill in the gaps for any newcomers to the series. The main villain is one bad-ass winged mofo, a genuine terror that our protagonists have right to fear, and the finale is as expected a bonkers array of bloody chaos.
Smartly put together by director Len Wiseman and coolly photographed by Simon Duggan (steel blues and greys), it isn't ground breaking cinema, but it's a wail of a time for those with expectation levels set at popcorn bonanza. 7/10