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IMDbPro

Ultraviolet

  • Serie TV
  • 1998
  • TV-14
  • 5h
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,8/10
2937
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Jack Davenport, Idris Elba, Susannah Harker, and Philip Quast in Ultraviolet (1998)
Alien InvasionConspiracy ThrillerVampire HorrorHorrorSci-FiThriller

Il sergente Michael Colefield scopre un'unità governativa segreta di caccia ai vampiri mentre indaga sulla scomparsa del suo partner.Il sergente Michael Colefield scopre un'unità governativa segreta di caccia ai vampiri mentre indaga sulla scomparsa del suo partner.Il sergente Michael Colefield scopre un'unità governativa segreta di caccia ai vampiri mentre indaga sulla scomparsa del suo partner.

  • Star
    • Jack Davenport
    • Susannah Harker
    • Idris Elba
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,8/10
    2937
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Star
      • Jack Davenport
      • Susannah Harker
      • Idris Elba
    • 58Recensioni degli utenti
    • 12Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Episodi6

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati1 stagione1998

    Foto21

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    Interpreti principali62

    Modifica
    Jack Davenport
    Jack Davenport
    • Detective Sergeant Michael Colefield
    • 1998
    Susannah Harker
    Susannah Harker
    • Dr. Angela March
    • 1998
    Idris Elba
    Idris Elba
    • Vaughan Rice
    • 1998
    Philip Quast
    Philip Quast
    • Father Pearse J. Harman
    • 1998
    Colette Brown
    Colette Brown
    • Kirsty
    • 1998
    Fiona Dolman
    Fiona Dolman
    • Frances
    • 1998
    Thomas Lockyer
    • Jacob
    • 1998
    Sean Cernow
    Sean Cernow
    • Lestat
    • 1998
    Corin Redgrave
    Corin Redgrave
    • Dr. Paul Hoyle…
    • 1998
    Stephen Moyer
    Stephen Moyer
    • Jack…
    • 1998
    Elizabeth Earl
    • Angie's Daughter
    • 1998
    Georgia Goodman
    Georgia Goodman
    • Emilie
    • 1998
    Jane Slavin
    Jane Slavin
    • Danni
    • 1998
    Emer Gillespie
    Emer Gillespie
    • Marion
    • 1998
    T.R. Bowen
    • Gideon
    • 1998
    Rupert Procter
    • Colin
    • 1998
    Ronnie Letham
    • Pollard
    • 1998
    Christopher Villiers
    Christopher Villiers
    • Lester
    • 1998
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti58

    7,82.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    10dr_foreman

    a bloody good time (rim shot)

    I think Hollywood has forgotten how to do vampires. I grew up watching gothic, quasi-religious Hammer Horror films from good olde England. But, sadly, period pieces are no longer popular...neither are positive depictions of religion, for that matter. The days of Dracula stalking through Victorian London and being repelled by crosses are over. Nowadays, we get scantily clad teenage girls or George Clooney kicking vampire butt with kung fu and shotguns. It's been a long, long downward spiral for the lords of the Undead.

    And yet, every once in a while, I ferret out a little vampire gem. The "Ultraviolet" DVD set was gathering dust on my brother's shelf when I decided to give it a whirl late one night. I didn't get hooked right away; the direction in episode one is a bit disjointed, and the first modern day vampire looks cheesy. But, ten minutes in, I found myself starting to care about the characters. They got me.

    This, my friends, is how to do vampires today. Religion is acknowledged, but is not an overwhelming force. Modern technology is used to combat the vampires more effectively, but they're still formidable foes - so you won't see them overcome with holy water-filled Super Soakers. In fact, "Ultraviolet" consistently plays to the vampires' strengths. They're subtle, stealthy, and seductive...like vampires should be. In too many recent films, they've been depicted as zombie-like "shock" troops; here, they're back in best scheming form. After all, if you live forever, you have lots of time to make elaborate plans...

    Not much by way of special effects here, but they're not really needed. There are some truly great suspense segments (particularly in episode five), and the acting is solid all around. I don't really think Jack Davenport ("Coupling") is miscast, as one other commentator suggested; he makes a good everyman.

    The closest American counterpart to "Ultraviolet" is "The X-Files," but the investigations in that show just didn't seem realistic to me. The police and medical procedures in "Ultraviolet" are, on the surface, more authentic. They're probably still bogus, but at least they're not *as* bogus.

    Sadly, the Brits only made one six-episode season, and creator Joe Ahearne says he pretty much got his message across in that short time. So, if you have six free hours to watch the best vampire entertainment in years, go to it!
    foole-2

    Simply the best

    vampire series or movie that I have ever seen. In fact, I'm hard pressed to think of any science fiction series or film that does it better. It takes one absurd premise (that vampires are real, and that, while still apparently composed of atoms and reflecting light, they nevertheless cannot be seen in mirrors, filmed, recorded, or detected by any indirect process) and then follows it with rigorous logic. The vampires (or leeches, as they are referred to) do not age or die, and they have had centuries to form a shadowy international conspiracy. Their goals and plans are murky, although their general motive is simple--ensure their food supply. Our heroes (or perhaps 'heroes') are a beleaguered team of humans trying to uncover the truth and break the undead cabal. In this respect, Ultraviolet resembles the X-Files, with some happy improvements. The vampire conspiracy is not essentially infallible. It is not so all-encompassing that our heroes survive only at the whim of their adversaries. And, the conspiracy doesn't enjoy that great advantage of most screen villains: the writer makes sure that they get away when the plot calls for it.

    A really good show. Get it on DVD and watch it.
    10bleffler

    Amazing

    This is one of the series I can watch again and again. I love it more and more every time I watch it. It's dark, moody atmosphere pulls you in from the very beginning, and keeps you glued to your seat for the full series.

    All six episodes are integral to six hour story line in which Mike Colefield (Jack Davenport) struggles to come to terms with what happened to his friend Jack Beresford (Stephen Moyer), and to choose sides in Humanity's war against Vampires which is nearing it's climax. It will keep you guessing as to who's good, and who's bad until the very end.

    I have to say that the series is a bit subtle for a mini-series. There are countless small details that can be overlooked during the first (Or even second in my case ;) Some of the plot elements aren't explained very well either. While this gives the series a "smart" feel to it, it makes it harder to understand.

    As I said before I thoroughly enjoyed this series, and I'll pounce on a second season if there ever is one.
    10mikerichards

    Dark and stylish fun

    You might want to sit down. Ultraviolet is stylish, smart and dare I say it - British…

    British science fiction has a bad reputation with the people who commission programmes for television. It has often been lumped in with children's programming, or consigned to a minority channel with a minimal budget. With no chance of filming spectacle, the writers fell back on plotting and characterisation, it may have looked cheap and nasty, but the glory always lay in the writing. However, up against an endless supply of glossy, vacuous American imports British SF was an endangered species.

    Fortunately, Channel 4 were willing to take a risk when they commissioned Ultraviolet. They chose to make a series that subverted the staple police drama with vampires.

    Mention vampires to people and they may think of Christopher Lee in a cloak, a Californian teenage girl's extracurricular activities or the foppish dandies of Anne Rice's novels, but the legends go back into the depths of mythology. The vampire mythos has been in and out of fashion for the last couple of centuries. It was popular in the Victorian era in a society coloured by the grim world of the newly industrialised cities, infant mortality and mass illnesses. It languished for most of the last century, only to come out of the shadows with the onset of AIDS and worries for the environment.

    Ultraviolet takes the mythical vampire and gives it a twist. This is a world recognisably our own, but with a dark core. These vampires live in the shadows – not only the physical darkness of night, but they are also lurking in the gloomier parts of society. They have interests in cancer, AIDS and the outcasts of society. They manipulate society to their own ends through human servants – willing and otherwise.

    The Catholic Church – in connivance with the British government has set up a team to investigate suspicious events and where necessary to destroy the vampires. This is a long way from Buffy's stakes and a spell in the library. This team comes equipped with SWAT commandos, guns, grenades and all the latest scientific equipment.

    Jack Davenport plays a policeman who falls into this alternate world when one of his colleagues goes missing.

    The episodes do feature an ongoing thread which reaches a conclusion in the final episode. However, most of the plot of each episode is self-contained, so even if you chance across an odd episode you will be able to pick up the story. Ultraviolet is not suitable for children as it contains discussion of such topics as paedophilia and abortion –both subjects are sensitively handled, but are bound to offend some people.

    The makers chose to use actors that could do justice to the material. If you tuned in halfway through an episode without realising what you were watching you could easily believe it was a glossy detective drama. Dialogue is well handled and understated – they act and sound like government officials, not bit players in a Hammer Horror film.

    Visually it looks superb, it was shot on film and the screen glows with cool colours not normally seen outside of big budget productions. The producers took advantage of the London scenery, daytime scenes are set in the leafy suburbs, whilst night shots feature the seedier side of the metropolis – amusement arcades, grim tube stations and lonely streets. Special effects are used sparingly and are competently handled to propel the story forward.

    Six hour long episodes were made. Part of me would like to see more of this dark world, to see the development of the grand plot and the characters, but another part says that it would have been impossible to maintain the standard without repeating some of the plot lines.

    A minor classic.
    10sim4ward

    Dark and Powerful Drama

    The word vampire might encourage the odd yawn from prospective viewers of any fantasy series these days, but fortunately Ultraviolet never uses the word and so we can enjoy it for what it is. My own feeling while watching this excellent series was that it was first and foremost a quality drama series. It has depth, it is thought-provoking, it is gripping and brilliantly conceived. The vampire element, referred to as leeches or Code 5 in the serial, are bound to present-day earth by such topical considerations as biological warfare, AIDS, abortion and other key social issues which, far from being boring or rammed down our throats, serve as a convincing backdrop to what is essentially a battle between authorities and the church, and the parasitic underground of late twentieth century society. The supernatural element, in fact, blends so superbly with the natural that if any viewer were to chance across this series in midstream they would find themselves wondering exactly what they were watching. Six episodes scarcely seems enough to satisfy, but on the other hand, the entire adventure is wrapped up so neatly that, unless some equally clever ideas are forthcoming, this mini-classic should be laid to rest. A high quality cast, scripts and an atmosphere to rival the best of the X Files, all rooted in darkly convincing reality, Ultraviolet is a powerful combination of supernatural thriller and drama with biting social comment. This is so good it hardly seems like fantasy at all. The future of British SF should look to Ultraviolet as its mentor.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Creator Joe Ahearne never intended to write and direct all six episodes. While the producers commissioned scripts from other writers, they ultimately felt that no other writers or directors understood Ahearn's vision as well as he. The result was that Ahearn's time was consumed with the development of the first series, and he was never able to outline a second arc. Ahearn also admits that he believes high-concept series are best kept short, so that they don't run out of steam and have to be re-invented.
    • Citazioni

      Father Pearse J. Harman: Our free range days are over.

    • Connessioni
      Remade as Ultraviolet (2000)

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    • How many seasons does Ultraviolet have?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 15 settembre 1998 (Regno Unito)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Crossing the Line
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Southwark Bridge, Southwark, Londra, Inghilterra, Regno Unito
    • Azienda produttrice
      • World Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      5 ore
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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