Director Len Wiseman goes for a wearying one-note seriousness that suggests Buffy the Vampire Slayer never happened: casting Bill Nighy as head vamp is inspired, but then to bury his already cadaverous features under latex and ask him to submit to the general po-facedness just seems a terrible waste of an actor usually capable of waking even the most jaded viewer from eternal slumber. Beckinsale is the other sinking point: when it comes to action-girl tough talk, she sounds like a nanny reproaching an especially petulant child; this Goth Mary Poppins not only looks as though she's never handled a big weapon in her life, but would surely be mown down in the thirty seconds it takes for her and her PVC raincoat to twirl balletically for the camera every time her foes crash through a door. It should have been a clash of the titans, a Dracula vs. Wolf-Man for the 21st century; instead, the dank, subterranean Euro-locations and cheap CGI lycanthropy remind one only of An American Werewolf in Paris. Underwhelming, to say the least.
(September 2003)
Underworld screens on Channel 4 tomorrow (Sunday) night at 11.25pm.
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