Cuando Doris Lang es elegida como la próxima novia del vampiro Conde Magnus Lee, contratará a un misterioso cazador de vampiros conocido solo como D en un intento de escapar de su mal habido... Leer todoCuando Doris Lang es elegida como la próxima novia del vampiro Conde Magnus Lee, contratará a un misterioso cazador de vampiros conocido solo como D en un intento de escapar de su mal habido.Cuando Doris Lang es elegida como la próxima novia del vampiro Conde Magnus Lee, contratará a un misterioso cazador de vampiros conocido solo como D en un intento de escapar de su mal habido.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 premio y 3 nominaciones en total
- D
- (voz)
- Doris
- (voz)
- Lee
- (voz)
- Lamika
- (voz)
- Greco
- (voz)
- Dan
- (voz)
- Roman
- (voz)
- Danton
- (voz)
- Left Hand
- (voz)
- …
- Gimlet
- (voz)
- D
- (English version)
- (voz)
- …
- Doris
- (English version)
- (voz)
- Lee
- (English version)
- (voz)
Reseñas destacadas
Review: I have seen this a number of times. This has aged well. I remember on the original VHS copy on the back saying, The First Animated Movie For Adults! Indeed.
Vampire Hunter D is a classic in it's own regard. The story is straightforward and effective. A village girl has been bitten be Count Magnus Lee and now hires The Dunpeal to take care of him. This movie has the old feel of the modern vampire lore like crosses work as well as garlic. This also takes place in the very distant future.
Here are the basics: The animation: Subpar. Not bad, but could be better, but this is 1985, so I can definitely give them a break. It's still not that bad.
The Voice acting: Pretty good with the exception of Doris' little brother sounding way to much like a girl. I always hated that. Otherwise fine.
The Characters: All not fully developed, but that was not meant to be, but there is some development and it works. Just enough character. Does not suffer from over crowdedness.
The Last Word: The good olé days. This is how the anime genre got it's grand start. Takes me back. This has aged well.
The one thing I appreciated about this film was that no one in it is a cardboard cutout. Evil is not portrayed as monolithic (if anything, it's shown as just amorality cubed) nor all humans automatically "good guys". Just like in the real world, everybody wants something. Doris wants revenge on a personal level and safety for her village on a community one. Count Lee wants to marry a bride to pass the time. His daughter wants this marriage to be stopped. The Count's time-twisting underling wants to go beyond his current station as loyal henchman. Doris' suitor wants her all to himself. D wants...well, what does D want?
Of all the characters in this story, D is the most enigmatic. If movies do indeed have a Tarot deck, as Stephen King suggests in "Danse Macabre", then D falls under the Eternal Loner (which also applies to such cinema protagonists as Eastwood's Man with No Name in the Sergio Leone spaghetti westerns and Lee Marvin's Walker in "Point Blank"). A half-human, half-vampiric descendent of the legendary Count Dracula himself, he is a man of two worlds, yet not truly a part of either. In one, he is barely tolerated out of necessity. In the other, he is hated for his chosen profession. His terse dialogue makes Eastwood look as talkative as Groucho Marx. By personal choice, he has cut himself off from all emotional ties to the people around him who, I'm fairly sure, will die long before he will (consider the comment regarding Doris' confession of love: "I know.").
The big question regarding D is why? Why does he do what he does? I'm not sure that he actually killed his father, as his conversation with Count Lee's daughter would seem to disprove. Perhaps his father saw how the vampires were changing the world and not for the better. Perhaps he instilled in his son the need to always protect those who are weaker than he from the many predators that this world had to offer (as a nobleman who felt a genuine, if patriarchial, concern for his people, it is not impossible that this would be so). One thing is certain: he does not kill his chosen prey for the common reasons that other men do: money, power, prestige, or even love. Maybe he kills to make the world a better place. Who can truly say? Maybe the new movie on the way will provide some answers.
These days the animation looks a little bit tired compared to contemporary anime but where VHD wins out is with story and atmosphere and just utter coolness!
It blew me a way all those years ago and I still get a kick out of it :)
As for the plot, there are no problems there, although there are a few cliché moments. The counts boredom, as opposed to the angst that seems to be all the rage in vampire flicks nowadays, is a nice touch, and at no point do characters motives seem unbelievable. The setting is a nicely realised far future post-apocalyptic landscape full of the standard juxtapositions (horse riders with laser rifles) bought to life by the supernatural element, which seems to have taken monsters and critters from anywhere and everywhere, to no detriment. The voice acting is competent, much better than some eighties dubs I could mention (unfortunately I only have this film on VHS, so I can't compare to the original Japanese).
Overall, not the best of 80's anime. It lacks the sophistication of Akira or the sheer camp hyperviolence of Fist of the North Star, but it's still a very enjoyable film, and a solid part of the collection of any anime connoisseur.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe character, Count Magnus Lee, is named as an homage to Christopher Lee who played Dracula in a long series of Hammer Films.
- Citas
Count Magnus Lee: I've lived for almost ten thousand years. Believe me you have no idea what that means: boredom. Everlasting and hideous boredom. A never ending search for ways to pass the time... and mating with a human female is one of the few I enjoy. Eventually they become tiresome. For in spite of their vitality, they are fundamentally stupid creatures who couldn't survive without the nobility to rule them. Perhaps now you'll understand my wanting to have some fun every thousand years or so?
- Versiones alternativasIn the Streamline Pictures English-dubbed release, a graphic shot of Count Magnus Lee's face crumbling during the final battle with D is replaced with a red flash. This change remains present in all subsequent North American prints, including the bilingual DVD and the subtitled VHS released by Urban Vision.
- ConexionesFeatured in Manga! (1994)
- Banda sonoraYour Song ('D'Mix)
Lyrics by Tetsuya Komuro
Music by Tetsuya Komuro & Naoto Kine
Arranged by Tetsuya Komuro
Performed by TM Network
Selecciones populares
- How long is Vampire Hunter D?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 254 US$
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