| Blade: The Series | |
|---|---|
The main cast of Blade: The Series |
|
| Format | Action Drama Horror |
| Created by | David S. Goyer |
| Starring | Kirk Jones Jill Wagner Neil Jackson Nelson Lee Jessica Gower |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 12 |
| Production | |
| Camera setup | Multicamera setup |
| Running time | 45 min. |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Spike |
| Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
| Original run | June 28, 2006 – September 13, 2006 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
Blade: The Series was an American television program based on the Marvel Comics character and popular film series. It premiered on Spike on June 28, 2006. Kirk "Sticky Fingaz" Jones starred in the title role, along with Jill Wagner as Krista Starr, Neil Jackson as Marcus Van Sciver, Jessica Gower as Chase and Nelson Lee as Shen The two-hour pilot was directed by Peter O'Fallon from a script by David S. Goyer (who wrote all three feature films) and noted comic book writer Geoff Johns.
Contents |
Plot
In the pilot, Krista Starr returns from military service in Iraq to learn that her twin brother, Zack, has died under mysterious circumstances. Her investigation reveals that Zack was a "familiar" - a kind of indentured servant who agrees to do a vampire's bidding in the hopes that his "master" will eventually reward him with eternal life. Krista's search for her brother's killer soon brings her face to face with Blade, as well as with the killer himself, Marcus Van Sciver, a powerful vampire and high ranking member of the House of Chthon. Smitten with Krista, Marcus decides to turn her into a vampire by injecting her with his blood. Krista is then approached by Blade, who injects her with the same serum he uses to control his own vampire instincts, and offers her a chance to help him avenge her brother's death and bring down Marcus and the House of Chthon, and revealed that Zack was trying to do a sting operation with Blade. The two form a reluctant partnership. The remainder of the season follows Krista's attempts to maintain her cover in the House of Chthon, all the while struggling with her growing predatory nature, and Marcus' (supposed) efforts to develop a "vaccine" that will render vampires immune to all their traditional weaknesses... sunlight, silver, garlic, etc. However, late in the season, it is revealed that Marcus' true purpose is to create a virus (see: Aurora Project) that will specifically target "purebloods," the ruling vampire class, and leave the turnbloods (normal vampires like Chase and Marcus, who were once human) unscathed. He eventually unleashes his weapon in the series finale, surprisingly enough with Blade's help.
Series chronology
The series apparently takes place after Blade: Trinity since certain events in that film were mentioned in the pilot episode. At the end of Trinity, Blade used the Daystar, a biological weapon that targets and kills vampires specifically. Apparently the Daystar has not spread far or fast as originally designed, as there are still many vampire houses in operation.
Aurora Project
The Aurora Project is a virus engineering program. 10 years ago, the pureblood vampires from the House of Chthon contracted with Marcus Van Sciver, head of their Detroit operations, to produce a vaccine that would eliminate the vampires genetic weakness to garlic, sunlight, and silver. The result of the project was the creation of the Aurora Virus. During the experimentation and testing phases, Aurora was tested on hundreds of vampires from the House of Armaya. Armayans were kidnapped, shrink wrapped in plastic, and forcibly injected with Aurora. They were then subjected to injections of garlic. The test subjects almost all died. Under pressure from the purebloods, Marcus finally developed a viable vaccine that was tested on the vampire Fritz. Fritz developed an immunity to garlic, silver, and sunlight. Fritz subsequently fought Blade to a draw. Marcus ordered Fritz to Prague to display his newfound immunity to the purebloods, instead Fritz went to find Blade and finish their battle. Fritz lost, and was beheaded by Krista Starr before Blade could capture him and find out what Aurora was. In the meantime, Damek (last pureblood from the House of Armaya) discovered that Marcus was using Armayans for experimentation. He used this knowledge to blackmail the House of Chthon into giving Armaya their seat back on the vampire council and getting a portion of all profits from the venture, plus first access to the vaccine. Growing impatient, Charlotte from the House of Chthon began to put pressure on Marcus to deliver the vaccine. Marcus finally told her it was ready, and a vampire conclave was organized to present the vaccine to the purebloods. At the same time, the vampire hunter Blade was attempting to get a sample of Aurora. Blade was concerned that if vampires made themselves immune to all of their weaknesses, they would rise up and try to rule the humans. Blade attempted to secure a sample through Krista, but she failed to retrieve a vial from the lab at Chthon. It was then that Marcus revealed to Krista that the vaccine didn't work, and that if Fritz hadn't been killed by her he would've died anyway. The vaccine was a ploy to cover for Marcus' true project, the Aurora Virus. Finally, Blade tracked down a woman named Vanessa who had been impregnated by Dr. Vonner. Blade kidnapped the woman and took her to a doctor of his own, who revealed she was not pregnant but actually incubating a strange fluid. Blade took a sample of the fluid and had it analyzed, they determined that it was a keyhole virus designed to attack pureblood vampires. Blade quickly learned that Marcus planned to betray the purebloods at the conclave and kill them all to seize control of the House of Chthon. Marcus kidnapped a pureblood vampire named Alex and used him as the final test subject for Aurora. He was placed in a chamber with Chase and subjected to the Aurora virus. The virus caused Alex to die horribly, but Chase was spared. Satisfied that the virus worked, Marcus made his next move and attempted to assassinate Charlotte. Marcus' plot failed, partly due to a betrayal by Chase, but Charlotte was killed anyway when Blade found her. Using her death as a catalyst, the conclave was convened. Marcus attempted to deploy the virus but it did not work, it was then that he learned of Chase's duplicity. Blade eventually killed the purebloods with a canister of the virus that he threw into the air and shot. Marcus left the conclave still in possession of the Aurora virus.
Episode list
| No. | Episode | Airdate |
|---|---|---|
| 1.01 | "Pilot" (two episodes) | June 28, 2006 |
| 1.02 | "Death Goes On" | July 5, 2006 |
| 1.03 | "Descent" | July 12, 2006 |
| 1.04 | "Bloodlines" | July 19, 2006 |
| 1.05 | "The Evil Within" | July 26, 2006 |
| 1.06 | "Delivery" | August 2, 2006 |
| 1.07 | "Sacrifice" | August 9, 2006 |
| 1.08 | "Turn of the Screw" | August 16, 2006 |
| 1.09 | "Angels and Demons" | August 23, 2006 |
| 1.10 | "Hunters" | August 30, 2006 |
| 1.11 | "Monsters" | September 6, 2006 |
| 1.12 | "Conclave" | September 13, 2006 |
Cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Kirk "Sticky Fingaz" Jones | Blade |
| Jill Wagner | Krista Starr |
| Nelson Lee | Shen |
| Neil Jackson | Marcus Van Sciver |
| Jessica Gower | Chase |
Inconsistencies
- Set in Detroit, Michigan, the pilot episode includes major inaccuracies about that city: Detroit was established in 1701, which is the early 18th century rather than the late 18th century, as Marcus claims. There is, however, a Joe Louis Arena, and a suburban city called Pontiac.
- The effects of silver have been contradicted repeatedly on this show. Silver burns vampires on contact, but in the movies and series, some vampires regenerate from these burns while others have permanent scars.
- Whether or not a human can be cured of vampirism has also been completely ignored by the show. In the first movie, Dr. Karen Jensen created a retrovirus that could cure anyone who was bitten. In Blade: Trinity, Hannibal King mentions that he cured himself. However, this cure is not mentioned on the series (though there was talk of Dr. Jensen appearing in episodes in the second season). It is assumed (though not explained) that Krista Starr could not be cured because she was not killed by the virus, she was killed by a fall from a rooftop after having been infected. Perhaps, Blade was holding that card as an ace in the hole to control Krista.
- In a flashback episode, it was shown that Whistler first met Blade when he was a small child. This contradicts Whistler's explanation in the first film: that he had found Blade as a teenager on the street, feeding off the homeless. However, the possibility exists that Whistler could've been speaking of after the fact, when Blade ran from home, in order to protect Blade's father, Blade from his father, not re-open up any wounds from Blade's past (if he happened to be eavesdropping), or because he truly thought Blade's parents were dead--and saw no reason to bring them up.
Ratings and cancellation
Although the series premiere had 2.5 million viewers, was the most-watched original series premiere in Spike TV history, and was also the #1 show on cable for the evening with Men 18–34 and 18–49, this occurred in a year where most cable premieres were outstanding, and the series has since failed to hold its numbers.[2] On September 28, 2006, Jill Wagner, star of Blade: The Series, announced that she was informed that there would be no second season of the show. The next day, Spike announced in a press release that the show would not be picked up. As a response to a letter in Wizard Magazine, series writer/producer Geoff Johns gives a reason why he thinks the series was cancelled: "The network didn't want to cancel it, I just think Spike TV is still a young network, and the price it was costing to make...they just weren't able to do it."
iTunes Premiere
- Blade: The Series was the second TV show to premiere on iTunes before ever having aired on mainstream television. The short-lived Law & Order spin-off Conviction was the first.
High-Definition
- Blade: The Series was filmed in high-definition, and the series is currently being shown on cable/satellite channel HDNet.
DVD Release
On February 12, 2008, New Line Home Entertainment will release Blade: The Series – The Complete Season on DVD. The complete Blade series will cover all 13 of the episodes completely uncut over four discs. The DVDs will be "unrated" and contain new content and alternate versions of scenes from the series filmed specially for the DVD, including examples of full-frontal nudity and harsher language.[3] The premiere episode made was released on DVD on September 18, 2007 in "Unrated" form.[4]
References to other media
- In the pilot, after first hearing about vampires but before she finds out that they're actually real, Krista sarcastically asks if werewolves are real too and is told that werewolves are "my colleague Marc Spector's realm of expertise." Spector is the alter ego of the Marvel superhero Moon Knight, who first appeared in the 1970's comic book series Werewolf by Night.
- Marcus Van Sciver's last name is an homage to comic book artist Ethan Van Sciver, who worked with series writer and executive producer Geoff Johns.
- The series contains numerous references to both the comics and the film series. Recurring villains Steppin' Razor, Thorne, and Damek are based on characters from the comics, footage from the first film is used briefly in the pilot, and Abraham Whistler (Blade's human mentor in the films) is mentioned in the pilot and later appears (in flashback) in the episode Sacrifice.
- In the flashback episode where we see Blade as a child, a friend gives him a copy of an Avengers comic book. Series writer Geoff Johns had a stint as a writer for the Avengers.
References in other media
- Jones' rendition of the Blade character makes an appearance in the video game Marvel Ultimate Alliance for the Nintendo Wii, Xbox 360, and other consoles. An unlockable costume change called "Daywalker" gives Blade the look he had in the television series.
References
- ^ John Dempsey, Rick Kissel (2006-06-29). Spike sharp with 'Blade'. Variety. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
- ^ The Futon Critic
- ^ Comic Book Resources
- ^ IGN.com
External links
- Blade: The Series at the Internet Movie Database
- Blade: The Series at TV.com
- MySpace Profile — The official MySpace profile of the series.
- Blade: The Series on TV Squad
- TV Series Finale — article on series cancellation & possible resurrection.
|
|
|---|
| Films: Blade • Blade II • Blade: Trinity TV Series: Blade: The Series |
| List of live action television programs based on Marvel Comics |
|---|
|


