Soulmates Eric and Shelly are brutally murdered when the demons of her dark past catch up with them. Given the chance to save his true love by sacrificing himself, Eric sets out to seek merciless revenge on their killers, traversing the worlds of the living and the dead to put the wrong things right.
Bill Skarsgård
Eric
FKA twigs
Shelly
Danny Huston
Vincent Roeg
Josette Simon
Sophia
Laura Birn
Marion
Sami Bouajila
Kronos
Karel Dobrý
Roman
Jordan Bolger
Chance
Sebastian Orozco
Dom
David Bowles
Wickham
Tundy Smith
Lex
Samba Goldin
Jay
Isabella Wei
Zadie
Jordan Haj
Adam
Dukagjin Podrimaj
Detective Milch
Darija Pavlovičová
Gray
Caolan O'Neil-Forde
Punk Inmate
Janek Gregor
Large Inmate
Lukáš Duy Anh Tran
Skinny Inmate
Solo Uniacke
Young Eric
Brian Caspe
Simon Elbe / Therapist
Peter Parker Mensah
Kelly (Guard)
Gregory Gudgeon
James
Bethany Adams
Clinical Aid
Jakub Strach
Chance Friend #4
Robert James Rich
Chance Friend #1
Vladimír Nezdaril
Change Friend #2
Beáta Golová
Chance Friend #3
Jim High
Uniformed Cop #1
Seam Turay
Uniformed Cop #2
Lada Bočková
Soloist #1
Daniel Matoušek
Soloist #2
David Evropejský
Mentor
Monika Kvasničková
Eric's Mother
Andrea Miltner
Music Teacher
Paul Maynard
Card Dealer
Leona Skleničková
Emma
Sinéad Phelps
EMT #1
Daniel Szelezsán
EMT #2 Kronos Look Alike
Emmanuel Iloegbunam
Drug Dealer
Paul Dean
Guard
Antonín Hausknecht
Friendly Driver (Stunt Driver)
Baha Chbani
Arabic Businessman #2
Ahmad Alhadi
Arabic Businessman #1
Jan Budař
Opera Fighter
Director
Rupert Sanders
Comic Book
James O'Barr
Screenplay
William Josef Schneider
Screenplay
Zach Baylin
August 29, 2024
6
I think the best plan of attack for this film is to forget all about Brandon Lee's 1994 version and treat this as a stand-alone vehicle for Bill Skarsgård to show off his ninja skills. He's "Eric" who encounters "Shellly" (FKA twigs) and is then promptly embroiled in the devilish machinations of "Roeg" (Danny Huston) who ensures that his hench-woman "Marion" (Laura Birn) kills them both. Turns out, though, that "Eric" still has enough purity of soul left to return to the land of the living and so long as he is touched by true love's kiss sort of thing, will remain immortal long enough to avenge the couple. Yes, there is a crow - the embodiment of his spirit when he goes on his murderous spree, but that whole theme isn't at all developed so let's just forget about that and revert to the whole point of the film - an excuse to pack loads of slaughter, acrobatics and dark, eerie photography into all but two hours of repetitious mediocrity. The camera likes Skarsgård well enough, and there's certainly plenty of him to see here as he takes on all comers. Why were they killed though? Who is "Roeg"? Sure, you can put your own interpretation onto the story if you can be bothered, but director Rupert Sanders has almost entirely focussed on the gloomy and very wet imagery and decided against putting any meat on the bones of the story or the characters. There's a welcome paucity of dialogue throughout and FKA clearly twigged there wasn't much for her to do here so leaves much of the film to her co-star trying his best to be an amalgam of "John Wick" and "Selene" from "Underworld" (2003). It does look good but hasn't an original feather in it's body. It's nice to see Josette Simon (remember "Blake's Seven"?) on the big screen, albeit briefly, but this is really all very disappointing.