Subspecies (film series)
Subspecies is a Romanian-American[1][2][3][4][5] direct-to-video horror film series produced by Full Moon Studios and Castel Film Studios. The series ran from 1991 to 1998, and followed the exploits of vampire Radu Vladislas, portrayed by Anders Hove, and his efforts to turn Michelle Morgan (played by Denice Duff) into his fledgling. A spin-off film, Vampire Journals, was released in 1997, which featured characters that would go on to appear in the final installment of the film series. Ted Nicolaou directed each of the five films, which included the spin-off; he also wrote the scripts for the sequels and spin-off.
Subspecies | |
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2007 box set cover art | |
Directed by | Ted Nicolaou |
Produced by | Ion Ionescu Vlad Panescu Oana Panescu |
Written by | Jackson Barr David Pabian Ted Nicolaou |
Starring | see below |
Music by | Stuart Brotman Richard Kosinski William Levine Michael Portis John Zeretzke |
Edited by | Bert Glatstein William Young Gregory Sanders |
Distributed by | Full Moon Features (USA)/Castel Film Studios (Romania) |
Release date | 1991–2020 |
Running time | 445 minutes |
Country | United States Romania |
Language | English |
The series was shot on location in Romania, utilizing stop-motion and rod puppet techniques to achieve the look the director wanted for the series' subspecies creatures. The series has had mixed reviews, with critics citing vampire clichés as a downfall of the films, but generally commending the director's choice in filming in Romania, as well as the special effects used in the films.
Films
Subspecies (1991)
Subspecies (1991) follows three college students, Mara, Michelle, and Lillian, as they begin a study on Romanian culture and superstition in the small town Prejmer. They are befriended by Stefan, a student studying nocturnal animals. It is revealed that the nearby Castle Vladislas has been caught in a power struggle between vampire brothers Stefan and Radu. Centuries prior, King Vladislas was seduced and cursed by a sorceress who eventually gave birth to Radu. After banishing Radu's mother, the king met a mortal woman. She gave birth to Stefan, who prefers to live in the open, and loathes his vampire heritage. To gain control over the Bloodstone, a relic that is said to drip the blood of the saints, Radu kills his father. In an effort to hurt his brother, Radu turns Mara and Lillian into vampires. Stefan, having fallen in love with Michelle, helps her try and free Mara and Lillian from Radu's control. Stefan drives a stake through Radu's heart and severs his head with a sword, killing Radu. Unfortunately for Stefan, Radu bites Michelle before his brother can kill him and mingles his blood with hers, which forces Stefan to turn Michelle with his own blood in order to keep her from becoming like Radu. As Stefan and Michelle sleep, Radu's minions set about resurrecting their master.[6]
Bloodstone: Subspecies 2 (1993)
Bloodstone: Subspecies 2 (1993) picks up directly after the events of the first film, with Radu's minions, the Subspecies, reattaching Radu's head and removing the stake from his heart. Radu finds Stefan and Michelle sleeping, and immediately kills Stefan. The rising sun forces Radu to seek refuge; Michelle wakes at sunset and finds Stefan dead in his coffin, with the Bloodstone still in his hands. Michelle flees to Bucharest with the Bloodstone, hoping to contact her sister, Becky, for help. Radu, with the help of his mother, "Mummy", sets out to find Michelle and the Bloodstone. Becky arrives in Romania and with the help of Lieutenant Marin, Professor Popescu, and US Embassy Agent Mel Thompson, attempts to find her sister. Radu eventually captures Michelle, who has been fighting her craving for blood since Radu took the Bloodstone. Mel and Lieutenant Marin do not believe Popescu and Becky, so the two of them go to a nearby crypt where they believe Michelle might be. Popescu is murdered by Mummy, while Becky is also captured and given to Michelle to feed from, as a way for Michelle to shed her mortal ties. Instead of killing her sister, Michelle stabs Radu in the face with an enchanted dagger, and sets fire to Radu's mother, who flees the room in flames. Becky and Michelle attempt to escape the catacomb, but Michelle is halted by the coming sunrise. Becky promises to return that evening, but as Michelle descends back into the tomb she is grabbed by a revived Mummy and carried off.[7]
Bloodlust: Subspecies 3 (1994)
Picking up where Subspecies 2 leaves off, Bloodlust: Subspecies 3 (1994) finds Michelle deep in the catacombs with Radu's mother, who brings her son back from the dead with Michelle's blood and the enchanted dagger that killed him; Radu, his mother, and Michelle return to Castle Vladislas. Michelle promises to obey Radu if he teaches her everything that he knows. Radu takes Michelle out hunting so she can enhance her powers, while Mel contacts a former operative of the CIA for help. While trying to rescue Michelle, Radu's mother quickly kills Mel's CIA friend, and knocks Mel unconscious. In an effort to get Michelle to stay with him forever, Radu kills his mother when she attacks Michelle. Becky arrives to save Michelle, but before everyone leaves, Michelle takes a gun from Becky, which contains silver bullets, and shoots Radu. The rising sun slows Michelle, so she is placed inside a body bag that was brought along; the delay allows Radu time to catch up to the group. Wanting the Bloodstone, which was taken by Michelle, Radu attempts to barter the group's lives in exchange for it. Becky throws it over the roof's edge, and when Radu attempts to follow it he is engulfed in the rays of the Sun. Radu's body bursts into flames and falls from the castle wall. Becky and the group make it to their car and drive off. Radu's burning corpse is left smoldering and impaled on tree branches, with his burning blood dropping to the ground; the flames soon go out and the blood morphs into new subspecies.[8]
Vampire Journals (1997)
Vampire Journals (1997) is a spin-off of the Subspecies film series, featuring the vampire Ash. Vampire Journals follows Zachary, a vampire with a conscience, who hunts the vampire bloodline that sired him. After witnessing the love of his life get turned into a vampire, Zachary destroys both her, and his master, and former protégé of Ash, Serena. Zachary, armed with the enchanted sword of a great vampire slayer called Laertes, seeks out the rest of Serena's bloodline to eradicate them. Zachary travels to Bucharest to find Ash. Zachary uses Ash's penchant for music and women to bait him out into the open for attack. Ash sets his sights on pianist Sofia, but is thwarted by Zachary during his first attempt to take Sofia. It is revealed through a conversation between Ash and a seer that Zachary's coming was expected and that the two are destined to fight; however, Ash is to be the victor. Ash does not give up on acquiring Sofia, and hires her for his nightclub. Over the next few nights he drains her of blood, so that he may turn her into a new apprentice. He also makes a deal with Zachary: he will give Zachary a consort, protection from the Sun, and allow Zachary to see Sophia if he leaves the city the following night. While Ash is preparing to sire Sofia, he gives his daytime consult Iris the key to Zachary's room, so that she may dispose of his sleeping body in the sunlight. Seeing that his obsession with Sofia will ruin both their lives, Iris releases Zachary instead. Zachary arrives too late; Sophia has already accepted Ash's blood. Fighting off a weakened Ash, Zachary and Sofia escape from the nightclub. Ash follows them, but the rising sun becomes a problem. Zachary manages to get back the sword and kill Ash, whose body falls into the Sun's rays. Zachary and Sofia then find refuge in a nearby closet.[9]
Subspecies 4: Bloodstorm (1998)
Subspecies 4: Bloodstorm (1998) begins with a badly burnt Radu able to find refuge in his crypt. A car accident takes the lives of everyone but Michelle, who is discovered by a stranger named Ana. Upon seeing Michelle's reaction to the sunlight, Ana takes her body to her former professor, Dr. Nicolescu, who quickly determines that Michelle is a vampire. When Michelle wakes, Dr. Nicolescu promises to cure her of her vampirism. Dr. Nicolescu is a vampire himself, but uses science to allow him to be immune to vampire weaknesses, with the exception of needing blood, and hopes to use Michelle to get the Bloodstone and therefore a cure for his condition. With his strength restored, Radu travels to Bucharest to claim the financial wealth one of his previous "fledglings", Ash, who has acquired in the Vladislas. Radu enlists Ash's help to track down Michelle, while Ash's own fledgling, Serena, attempts to play Radu and Ash against each other. Radu discovers Michelle's location, and Dr. Nicolescu agrees to give her to Radu in exchange for three drops of blood from the Bloodstone. Radu agrees, but it was only a trick to allow Dr. Nicolescu the opportunity to capture and stake Radu. Michelle arrives releases Radu, and the two flee to safety. Serena arrives immediately after and gives Ana a key to the Vladislas crypt, where Radu is, with instructions to kill Radu. Ana and Dr. Nicolescu arrive at the tomb, but Radu awakens and kills Nicolescu. Radu turns his attention to Ana, but Michelle slices his throat, allowing Ana enough time to decapitate Radu. They burn his body and take the Bloodstone. Ash and Serena are waiting at the opening of the crypt, but a caretaker, hearing Ana's screams, opens the crypt and spills sunlight inside. Michelle is hidden in a coffin and transported out of the cemetery, while Radu's head sits on a pike burning in the sun.[10]
Cast and characters
List indicator(s)
- Italics indicate a transition to a minor role, such as an extended flashback, after the initial appearance.
- A dark grey cell indicates the character was not in the film.
Character | Film | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Subspecies | Bloodstone | Bloodlust | Bloodstorm | Vampire Journals | |
King Vladislas | Angus Scrimm | ||||
Radu Vladislas | Anders Hove | ||||
Stefan Valescu Vladislas | Michael Watson | ||||
Michelle Morgan | Laura Tate | Denice Duff | |||
Mara | Irina Movila | ||||
Lillian | Michelle McBride | ||||
Rosa | Mara Grigore | ||||
Ian | Adrian Vâlcu | ||||
Karl | Ivan J. Rado | ||||
Mel Thompson | Kevin Blair | Cristi Rasuceanu | |||
Rebecca Morgan | Melanie Shatner | Ioana Voicu | |||
Professor Nicoli Popescu | Michael Denish | ||||
Mummy | Pamela Gordon | ||||
Lt. Marin | Ion Haiduc | ||||
Bob | Michael Dellafemina | ||||
Ash | Jonathon Morris | ||||
Ana Lazar | Ioana Abur | ||||
Dr. Ion Niculescu | Mihai Dinvale | ||||
Serena | Floriela Grappini | ||||
Dr. Lupu | Dan Astileanu | ||||
Detective Voda | Gelu Nitu | ||||
Zachery | David Gunn | ||||
Sofia | Kirsten Cerre | ||||
Anton | Dan Condurache | ||||
Iris | Starr Andreeff | ||||
Rebecca | Rodica Lupu | ||||
Cassandra | Ilinca Goia | ||||
Dimitri | Mihai Dinvale | ||||
Walter | Mihai Niculescu | ||||
Oracle | Maria Dimitrache-Caraman |
Production
In 1991, Subspecies became the first American film to be filmed in Bucharest, Romania. Director Ted Nicolaou was initially apprehensive about shooting on location in Romania, but during a four-day location scout he came to love the location thanks to the free rein he had over the ancient ruins and woodland area.[11] Other Transylvanian areas would be used for all Subspecies films, with specific location shootings at Hunedoara, Brașov, and Sinaia.[12] Although, the remnants of communism left in the country, along with cultural differences and the general problems that accompany film productions lent to a difficult experience for the crew while shooting the first Subspecies film.[11]
The subspecies creatures, which were created from Radu's blood, originally began as local Romanian men in rubber suits. The men were filmed on over-scaled sets to simulate the miniature size of the creatures. The performances of the Romanian men, along with the design of the rubber suits, caused director Ted Nicolaou to rethink his approach. Nicolaou brought in animator David W. Allen to assist him in creating "more magical" looking subspecies creatures. Allen went through all of the film footage that contained the Romanian extras in their rubber suits with the film's editor in order to find usable footage before and after the men enter the scene. Allen would use the isolated footage to develop a new background for the animated creatures he would later create. Allen created two puppet types, displayed in front of a bluescreen: a stop-motion puppet and a rod puppet. Each of the puppet types were composed of foam rubber, and held similar skeletal systems. Some differences between the two types include tension filled joints for the stop-motion puppet, while the rod puppet was looser. The flexibility of the rod-puppet allowed for faster movements, which were needed occasionally for real-time filming.[11]
For Bloodstone and Bloodlust, Wayne Toth and Norman Cabrera came on board to create the special make-up effects for the films; they also pulled double duty composing and performing the music, alongside Romanian musicians, for a portion of Bloodstone. The limited budget that Toth and Cabrera had to work forced them to use any location they could find in order to apply the make-up to the actors, as they did not have a separate workstation. Make-up trailers would be created in local resident's homes, cave openings, inside of cars, or just sitting on the side of the road.[12] To create Radu's face, Toth and Cabrera applied four separate prosthetic pieces to Anders Hove's forehead, left and right cheek, and his chin. A cosmetic make-up is applied over his entire face to help conceal those four prosthetics. This was the same process used in the original Subspecies film, although Toth and Cabrera admit to tweaking the coloring of Radu's skin. One major change to the make-up process was to Radu's hands. In the original film, Hove had to wear individual appliances on each of his fingers, but to cut back on the time needed to apply the make-up, Toth and Cabrera created a pair of prosthetic gloves that Hove could slip on his hands. For "Mummy", Radu's sorceress mother, a headpiece was cast from Pamela Gordon, which included her shoulders as well. After the make-up was applied to give the cast a "dry" and "mummified" appearance, it was slipped over Gordon's head leaving only her face showing. From there, Toth and Cabrera applied a separate face prosthetic. The facial appliance gave Gordon near zero visibility, having only a single eye slit for her left eye. The crew had to escort her around sets so that she would not injure herself. Gordon was given a pair of dentures to wear, as well as some prosthetic gloves similar to what Hove wore. The rest of Gordon's body was draped in clothing to conceal it.[13]
Reception
Culture Cartel critic Mike Bracken believed the story was "largely clichéd", coupled with "bad acting" on the part of Watson and the female cast, but commended the realism Nicolaou created by shooting on location in Romania—using Romanian residents for smaller roles in the film—as well as the fact that the film does not "take itself too seriously", making it "more fun" than Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula.[14] Cold Fusion Video's Nathan Shumate echoed Bracken's opinion on the "authenticity" created from the Romanian landscaping and actors that gave "the feel of verisimilitude", but criticized the stop-motion subspecies as being "irrelevant to the main action", and the story as a "general lack of urgency".[15] Richard Scheib, a critic for science fiction, horror, and fantasy review website Moria, felt the original film "showed promise" when it attempted to go "back to the folklore roots of vampirism"; he also liked the authentic feeling from shooting in Romania, but felt the limited budget restricted the film from being convincing, with David Allen's stop-motion subspecies creatures being a disappointment.[16] When he had a chance to review Bloodstone, Scheib felt the sequel delivered "vampire clichés", but again "showed promise" with its imaginative make-up effects—specifically the staking of Stefan, the reattachment of Radu's head by the subspecies creatures, the look of Mummy—as well as the visual effects of Radu's shadow stalking Michelle through town, which gave Scheib a sense of Nosferatu. Another criticism from Scheib was with the replacement of Laura Tate with Denice Duff; Scheib characterizes Duff as "internalized and afraid", as opposed to the addition of Melanie Shatner's character, Rebecca Morgan, who he classifies as "alert and intelligent".[17]
DVDschlock wrote that the film series "manage to give an edge of bad-assitude to its vampires", and that "each entertains in its own right and furthers the Subspecies tale one more step beyond the last one... until finally being beaten over the head by a shovel with the stinky Vampire Journals".[18] In a review by LaserDisc, it was felt that one consistency through the series was Radu, whose villainy is "effectively embodied" by Anders Hove. LaserDisc also believed that the sequels sustained the entertainment value through their intelligent use of eroticism, gore and on-location setting.[19]
Future
A fifth film for the main story, Subspecies V: Blood Rise, was announced in April of 2019,[20] and filming is set to begin in July of 2020 in Albania,[21] as part of Full Moon's "Deadly Ten" initiative.[21] Anders Hove and Denice Duff are set to reprise their roles as Radu Vladislas and Michelle Morgan, respectively.[21]
Other media
In 1991, Full Moon teamed with Eternity Comics to produce comic books series for a handful of Full Moon's titles. Among these comics was a Subspecies series that served as a prequel to the first film. The title ran as a four-issue mini-series.[22]
See also
References
- "Subspecies (1991)". British Film Institute. Retrieved June 6, 2009.
- "Bloodstone: Subspecies II". Castel Film Studios. Retrieved December 17, 2016.
- "Bloodlust: Subspecies III". Castel Film Studios. Retrieved December 19, 2016.
- "Subspecies 4: Bloodstone". Castel Film Studios. Retrieved December 19, 2016.
- "Vampire Journals". Castel Film Studios. Retrieved December 19, 2016.
- Jackson Barr, David Pabian (writers) and Ted Nicolaou (director) (1991). Subspecies (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Ted Nicolaou (writer/director) (1993). Bloodstone: Subspecies II (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Ted Nicolaou (writer/director) (1994). Bloodlust: Subspecies III (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Ted Nicolaou (writer/director) (1997). Vampire Journals (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Ted Nicolaou (writer/director) (1998). Subspecies 4: Bloodstorm (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Various crew members (1991). Behind the scenes: Making of Subspecies (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Various crew members (1993). Behind the scenes: Making of Bloodstone: Subspecies II (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Various crew members (1994). Behind the scenes: Making of Bloodlust: Subspecies III (DVD). Full Moon Features.
- Mike Bracken (2002-02-22). "Subspecies review". Culture Cartel. Retrieved 2007-11-07.
- Nathan Shumate (2001-01-17). "Subspecies (1991) review". Cold Fusion Video. Archived from the original on 2007-10-16. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
- Richard Scheib (1996). "Moria review of Subspecies". Moria:The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Archived from the original on 2007-10-22. Retrieved 2007-11-12.
- Richard Scheib. "Moria review of Bloodstone: Subspecies II". Moria:The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Archived from the original on 2007-10-23. Retrieved 2008-01-19.
- "Subspecies: The Epic Collection review". DVDschlock. August 2007. Archived from the original on February 8, 2008. Retrieved 2007-11-12.
- "Subspecies review". DVDLaser.com. Archived from the original on 2008-06-02. Retrieved 2008-04-14.
- Band, Charles. "Filmmaker". youtube. Full Moon Features. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
- Subspecies v: blood rise - Deadly Ten deadlyten.com
- "Subspecies comic book". Comic Book DB. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
External links
- Subspecies at IMDb
- Bloodstone: Subspecies II at IMDb
- Bloodlust: Subspecies III at IMDb
- Subspecies 4: Bloodstorm at IMDb
- Vampire Journals at IMDb
- Subspecies (1991) at Rotten Tomatoes
- Bloodstone: Subspecies II at Rotten Tomatoes
- Bloodlust: Subspecies III at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Vampire Journals at Rotten Tomatoes