DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen | $16.99 |
| DVD - Full Frame | $12.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $12.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $21.59 |
360° Tour of Dracula's Castle; Deleted Scenes; Your Are in the Movie!; The Legend of Van Helsing; Feature Commentary with Director Stephen Sommers and Editor/Producer Bob Duscay; Feature Commentary with Richard Roxburgh, Shuler Hensley and Will Kemp.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. It's Alive!
2. The Vatican's Avenger
3. The Order
4. Werewolf Hunters
5. Welcome to Transylvania
6. His Name Is Van Helsing
7. Looking for Answers
8. Curse of the Werewolf
9. Castle Frankenstein
10. Dracula's Children
11. Old Acquaintances
12. Failure
13. The Living Painting
14. The Frankenstein Monster
15. Hell on Wheels
16. Mark of the Wolf
17. The Monster's Ball
18. Van Helsing's Vow
19. The Door to Dracula
20. The Cure
21. Life for My Children
22. You Can Go When You're Dead
23. The Spawning
24. The Only Way
25. The Left Hand of God
26. Sacrifice
27. Reunion
28. End Titles
Having successfully re-imagined one of Universal's classic movie monsters in the recent Mummy films, director Stephen Sommers broadens his scope to include the rest of the gang in this extravagantly produced, thrill-packed motion picture. Although Sommers emphasizes action over atmosphere, Van Helsing still manages to be as creepy as it is exciting, maintaining a gothic look and establishing a pervasive mood of otherworldly malevolence. Hugh Jackman, whose turns in the X-Men movies have equipped him for the flamboyant heroics required by films like this one, portrays vampire slayer Gabriel Van Helsing, whose late-19th-century pursuit of Count Dracula (Richard Roxburgh) gets him caught up in a scheme that involves the Frankenstein monster (Shuler Hensley) and the Wolf Man (Will Kemp). His closest ally is Anna Valerious (Kate Beckinsale), a feisty young woman whose family has opposed Dracula for generations. Sommers takes considerable liberties with the various monster mythologies established in the Universal films of the '30s and '40s, and his versions of the classic creatures eschew the familiar look of their previous incarnations. But there's plenty here to warm the hearts of horror-movie fans, and more than enough dynamic, explosive action to keep other viewers interested. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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