. "Wesley Snipes"@en . . "65000000"^^ . "Blade: Trinity"@en . . . . . . . . "blade"@en . . . "Blade"@en . . . "Conrad Smart"@en . "6780.0"^^ . . . . "Blade: Trinity"@en . . . . . . . "Shawn Danielle Productions Ltd."@en . . . . . . "1.28905366E8"^^ . . . . . "The film begins with an opening narration about Dracula, told by Hannibal King (Ryan Reynolds): In the movies, Dracula wears a cape and some old English guy always manages to save the day at the last minute with crosses and holy water, but everybody knows the movies are full of shit. The truth is, it started with Blade and it ended with him. The rest of us were just along for the ride. From here there are multiple endings:"@en . "Imaginary Forces"@en . "Cale Boyter"@en . . . . . "Blade: Trinity is a 2004 sequel to Blade (1998) and Blade II (2002). The film follows the half human/half vampire teaming up with a vampire hunting team called the Nightstalkers led by the daughter of Abraham Whistler to kill the vampire Dracula. The budget of the film was $70 million and it grossed $129 million worldwide with $52 million coming from North America."@en . "Howard E. Smith"@en . . . . . "Blade: Trinity is a 2004 sequel to Blade (1998) and Blade II (2002). The film follows the half human/half vampire teaming up with a vampire hunting team called the Nightstalkers led by the daughter of Abraham Whistler to kill the vampire Dracula. The budget of the film was $70 million and it grossed $129 million worldwide with $52 million coming from North America."@en . "18"^^ . "7320.0"^^ . . . . "6780.0"^^ . . . . . "359013"^^ . . . . . . . . . "Blade: Trinity"@en . . "2004-12-08"^^ . "David S. Goyer"@de . . . . . . . "New Line Cinema"@en . . . . . . . . . "Wiki.png Regie Drehbuch Produzent Kamera Musik Kinostart DE Kinostart US L\u00E4nge Budget FSK Blade: Trinity ist ein US-amerikanischer Kinofilm und die Fortsetzung von Blade 2."@de . "2004-12-06"^^ . "Amen Ra Films"@en . . "David S. Goyer, Lynn Harris und Welsey Snipes"@de . . . . "Wiki.png Regie Drehbuch Produzent Kamera Musik Kinostart DE Kinostart US L\u00E4nge Budget FSK Blade: Trinity ist ein US-amerikanischer Kinofilm und die Fortsetzung von Blade 2."@de . . . . "English"@en . . . . . . "Theatrical release poster"@en . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ File:Information-silk.png File:Blade Trinity.jpg File:Harvey2.jpg Title File:Harvey2.jpg Universe Earth-26320 Film Details File:Harvey2.jpg Directors David S. Goyer File:Harvey2.jpg Producers Wesley Snipes, Avi Arad, Cale Boyter, Toby Emmerich File:Harvey2.jpg Comic Book Writers Uncredited File:Harvey2.jpg Screenplay Writers Uncredited File:Harvey2.jpg Musicians Ramin DjawadiRZA File:Harvey2.jpg Cinematographers Gabriel Beristain File:Harvey2.jpg Editors Conrad Smart, Howard E. Smith File:Harvey2.jpg Distributors New Line Cinema, Warner Bros. File:Harvey2.jpg Production Companies Amen Ra Films, Marvel Enterprises, New Line Cinema File:Harvey2.jpg Running Time 113 minutes File:Harvey2.jpg Rating MPAA: Rated R for strong pervasive violence and language, and some sexual content File:Harvey2.jpg Budget $65,000,000 File:Harvey2.jpg Release Date(s) December 8, 2004 Associated Websites File:Harvey2.jpg Official Website Official site File:Harvey2.jpg Facebook Page facebook.com/BladeFilmsOfficial On Marvel Movies Blade: Trinity On the Internet Movie Database imdb.com Previous Film Next Film"@en . . . "David S. Goyer"@en . "Blade Movies"@en . . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ File:Information-silk.png File:Blade Trinity.jpg File:Harvey2.jpg Title File:Harvey2.jpg Universe Earth-26320 Film Details File:Harvey2.jpg Directors David S. Goyer File:Harvey2.jpg Producers Wesley Snipes, Avi Arad, Cale Boyter, Toby Emmerich File:Harvey2.jpg Comic Book Writers Uncredited File:Harvey2.jpg Screenplay Writers Uncredited File:Harvey2.jpg Musicians Ramin DjawadiRZA File:Harvey2.jpg Cinematographers Gabriel Beristain File:Harvey2.jpg Editors Conrad Smart, Howard E. Smith File:Harvey2.jpg Distributors New Line Cinema, Warner Bros. File:Harvey2.jpg Production Companies Amen Ra Films, Marvel Enterprises, New Line Cinema File:Harvey2.jpg Running Time 113 minutes Fil"@en . . . "6.5E7"^^ . . . . . . "The film begins with an opening narration about Dracula, told by Hannibal King (Ryan Reynolds): In the movies, Dracula wears a cape and some old English guy always manages to save the day at the last minute with crosses and holy water, but everybody knows the movies are full of shit. The truth is, it started with Blade and it ended with him. The rest of us were just along for the ride. The film starts with a group of vampires, looking for \"Drake\", a.k.a. Dracula (Dominic Purcell). They subsequently find and wake him in a Syrian ziggurat tomb, although not before he kills one of their own number. Being unaware of the existence of vampires, the world considers Blade to be a serial killer. The vampires capitalize on this misconception and succeed in framing Blade (Wesley Snipes) for the killing of a familiar posing as a vampire. During the ensuing manhunt, the FBI locate and attack the hideout. During the siege, Whistler (Kris Kristofferson) is mortally wounded and perishes after setting the hideout self-destruct. With his mentor gone, Blade allows himself to be captured. The police prepare to hand Blade over to a group of supposed federal agents, who are, unknown to them, vampires. But he is rescued by Hannibal King and Abigail Whistler (Jessica Biel). The two head a group of vampire hunters called the Nightstalkers, formed by Blade's mentor to assist him. King and Abigail reveal that the vampire Danica Talos (Parker Posey), who turned King into a vampire in the past (but now cured), has located Drake. Talos hopes that by resurrecting him, Drake will help save the vampire race by producing more daywalkers, and eliminate Blade. In his first confrontation with Blade, Drake shows an affinity for Blade, as they are both \"honorable warriors\". Ironically, while Drake is delivering his speech about honor, he is hiding behind a baby he has taken hostage; however, he appears to consider humans as unworthy of any consideration unless they first prove themselves. During the chaos, King is incapacitated by Drake. Blade eventually learns of a bioweapon the Nightstalkers had created called Daystar, an airborne virus capable of killing every single vampire in the world. However, there are two catches. The first is that they need Drake's blood and it must be infused with the virus. As he is the first vampire, his DNA is still pure, which, infused with Daystar, will make it work to its maximum efficiency. The second: the virus could possibly kill Blade, since he is half-vampire. Blade and Abigail learn of the vampire \"final solution\", which involves a warehouse where hundreds of homeless humans are being kept \"alive\" in a chemically-induced coma, trapped in body bags. This keeps in line with vampires needing live food sources if the vampire race were to take over the world. Blade has all of them put out of their misery, shutting down their life support. The two return to find the Nightstalkers have been all but wiped out. The only exception is King, who has been kidnapped by Drake, and a young girl named Zoe (Haili Page), the daughter of one of the Nightstalkers. Blade and Abigail go to the Talos building to save their friends. Meanwhile, King is chained and tortured by Jarko Grimwood (Triple H) and Asher Talos (Callum Keith Rennie) for information about Daystar. When this fails to get any information from him, Talos threatens that she will bite King and leave him to feed on Zoe. Drake tries to convince the young Zoe to become a vampire so that she won't have to die. He tells her that there is no God, heaven or angels, Zoe simply states to Drake \"My friends are coming to kill you\". Blade and Abigail eventually enter the building, and the fighting begins after they freed King. Abigail kills Asher and King kills Jarko Grimwood while Blade engages Drake in a sword battle. In the end, Blade impales Drake with the Daystar arrow, and releases it into the air, killing all the nearby vampires, including Talos. He then honors Abigail and her fighting skills by making her a full-fledged \"blade.\" As Drake dies, he praises Blade for fighting with honor and tells him that through Blade, the vampire race will survive. Dying, he offers Blade a \"parting gift\"; he also warns him that the thirst will eventually win. From here there are multiple endings: \n* Theatrical ending: As Blade fought honorably, Drake gives him a \"parting gift\" by transforming his body into a replica of Blade's just before he dies. The FBI captures the body of who they think is Blade and thus call off their manhunt for Blade. In the morgue Blade's body reverts into that of Drake's. Hannibal's voiceover tells the viewer that Blade is still out doing what he does, and that the war will never end. \n* Unrated ending: The body captured by the FBI is Blade, but he's not really dead. He sits up abruptly in the morgue, attacks the FBI agents, and appears ready to bite a nurse on the neck. The ending is ambiguous as to whether Blade is actually Drake surviving The Daystar Virus or the real Blade retaining his humanity or giving in to his vampire thirst, or becoming the new vampire messiah as Drake predicted. This is the ending seen on the director's cut of the film, and commentary on the DVD indicates it was the ending director Goyer intended. \n* Werewolf ending: The Daystar virus circles the globe and wipes out all vampires. Blade walks off into the sunset, his long battle finally over. The final shot is of the Nightstalkers battling a new enemy... werewolves. This version of the ending was used in the novelization of the film and is included on the DVD as an extra;[citation needed], it was rejected for use in the film itself early on in production, due to similarities to the vampires versus werewolves in the Underworld series, the discontinuity with the back story, and for simply being too silly in Goyer's opinion."@en . . . "Gabriel Beristain"@en . . "Blade: Trinity"@de . . . . "2005-01-20"^^ . .