Dracula II: Ascension (2003)

horror

directed by : Patrick Lussier
featuring : Jason Scott Lee - Craig Sheffer - Sharon London - Diane Neal - Stephen Billington
running time : 1 hour 38 minutes
The burned corpse of Dracula (Stephen Billington) is revived by a wheelchair-bound scientist, Lowell (Craig Sheffer), and his devoted students in an effort to cure Lowell of a fatal disease. They chain the demon to a slab at the bottom of an abandoned indoor swimming pool and begin their experiments. But the highly contagious, extremely convincing fiend can create havoc even chained up, as Elizabeth (Diane Neal) and Luke (Jason London) find out the hard way. Luckily, vampire-slaying priest Uffizi (Jason Scott Lee) arrives with his razor-studded whip.

The follow-up to the theatrical Dracula 2000, written and directed by the same creative team, brings new faces and an impressive burst of energy to the continuing story. Considering its status as a direct-to-video sequel, production values are extraordinarily top-line, with all the money on the screen. Director Patrick Lussier keeps the pace steady and the gore factor high, but not uncomfortably so, because some of it is played for laughs. In fact, there are lots of throwaway jokes amid the very serious bloodletting. There's a wall-to-wall orchestral score by Kevin Kliesch that rocks the ear and special effects by iOFilm that dazzle the eye, as well as a lively, occasionally comical script that is forever surprising. Horror and action fans will be delighted by the overall quality and no doubt will want to see Dracula III: Legacy, shot at the same time as the this film, which resolves the cliffhanger ending.