Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic
Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic | |
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Directed by |
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Written by | Brandon Auman |
Based on | Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri and Dante's Inferno by Visceral Games |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Music by | Christopher Tin |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Anchor Bay Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 88 minutes |
Countries | United States Japan South Korea |
Language | English |
Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic is a direct to DVD animated dark fantasy action film released on February 9, 2010. Based on Dante's Inferno video game which is itself loosely based on Dante's Inferno,[1][2] Dante must travel through the circles of Hell and battle demons, creatures, monsters, and even Lucifer himself to save his beloved Beatrice.
Plot[]
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (February 2013) |
Returning from the Third Crusade, Dante arrives home to find his servants slain, his father dead and his beloved fiancee Beatrice dying of a stab wound to the stomach. As she dies, she turns into a spirit and begins to ascend into Heaven. However, a shadowy Lucifer plucks Beatrice from the sky and into the gates of Hell. Dante gives chase and follows them into Hell.
Dante fights off and slaughters a mob of creatures, but is captured by a score of serpent-like arms which sow a red cross into his chest and torso - a living tapestry detailing his greatest sins in life. Virgil appears and offers to guide him through Hell; Dante, invoking his faith, tears open the gates and enters.
Dante and Virgil board Charon, a massive, demonic, living ferry that takes souls across the river Acheron to the First Circle of Hell. Charon commands demons to attack Dante, as no living being is allowed to enter. Dante fights them off, but loses his sword and so picks up one of the demons' scythes. He then kills Charon and steers him into the coasts of the first circle, Limbo.
Virgil and Dante enter Limbo, home to mostly virtuous pagans and unbaptized babies. Here Dante learns Beatrice was pregnant with his child while he was away, but miscarried. Attacked by demonic children, he and Virgil escape into a large building; they enter a hall of great rulers, philosophers, and thinkers, including Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, and Saladin, whose forces Dante had battled during his crusade. Moving on, they encounter King Minos, whose task is to send condemned souls to their sin's corresponding circle of Hell. He denies Dante entry; they battle, and Minos is killed. Meanwhile, Lucifer tortures Beatrice, repeatedly killing her, tricking her with the hope of rescue, and taunting her that Dante had been unfaithful.
On the storm-ravaged shores of the second circle, the island of Lust, bodies fly through the wind, intertwined, caught in a never-ending storm of passion. Hearing Beatrice's cries in the distance, Dante enters a room of succubi who transform into hideous demons. As they try to seduce him, he realizes that he did break his promise to Beatrice; during the Crusade, an imprisoned heretic woman offered to have sex with him after Dante refused to stop his guards from beating her husband to death. Under the illusion he was 'absolved' of all sin by a priest, he agrees to the deal, calls off his guards from killing the man, and rapes her. Upon hearing this, Beatrice begins to lose faith, but still refuses Lucifer's offer of his hand in marriage.
The pair come to a grotto where men and women who had lived their lives in gluttony are tortured by starvation; many are caught and devoured by Cerberus, the great hound of Hell. Virgil tells Dante the only way to the next circle is from within the beast, so Dante allows himself to be eaten. He encounters Ciacco, a man from his village, who confesses to gluttony; Dante tells him to be free and blesses him with his cross. Ciacco's spirit floats skyward. A shadow of Lucifer appears to torment Dante and later shows him a glimpse of his father's memory: stuffing himself with food while a disgusted and famished Beatrice watches. Dante later attacks and destroys the hound's heart to escape.
Floating down into the next circle, Dante and Virgil meet men and women who wasted their lives in pursuit of material possessions. The condemned souls are tortured by being sheared in money presses, boiled in melted gold, and buried in enormous mounds of coins. Here Dante confronts his father, who has been promised a thousand years free of torture and endless gold to murder his own son. The pair battle, trade barbs with each other, and Dante eventually kicks his father into a vat of boiling gold.
Proceeding through the fifth circle of hell, Wrath, Dante gets grabbed by swarms of arms and hands. He then has a flashback to when the prisoners demanded and begged for food. Dante becomes overcome with anger and decides that heretics' lives are nothing worth more than Christians'. Virgil and Dante come to the River Styx, where spirits are fighting in the shallow, murky waters. They climb aboard Phlegyas, a demonic giant who traverses the river. Among the wrathful souls, Dante recognizes Filippo Argenti who taunts him only to be brought down by other wrathful spirits. Dante sees Lucifer in the city of Dis; he announces to the city's damned souls his intent to marry Beatrice. Dante urges Phlegyas to run and chase after Lucifer, only to have Lucifer strike Phlegyas down, forcing Dante to disembark him.
In the sixth circle of Hell, heretics forever burn in fire and are tortured. Dante meets his rival Farinata, who taunts him, revealing Lucifer's plan to wed Beatrice and leave him trapped in Hell forever. Dante angrily kills Farinata, and with Virgil, flees the circle before it collapses from quakes caused by the force of Christ's death.
Virgil helps Dante defeat the Minotaur, guardian of the Circle of Violence, who is overcome by his own anger. The centaur Nessus helps them to cross a river where many souls of the violent are boiling in the blood of their victims. Entering the Forest of Suicides, Dante hears a familiar cry and finds his mother growing from the sapling of a tree, forever in pain for hanging herself rather than standing up against or leaving her husband, Dante's father. Believing she had died of a fever, Dante is overwhelmed with sorrow; he uses his cross to free her soul.
They come to a graveyard within the Abominable Sands. Dante's one-time Crusader comrades, including his friend Francesco, rise from the grave as undead warriors, condemned for committing acts of violence in the name of God. Dante defeats Francesco and remembers that he himself had slaughtered several heretics. Dante then prays to God that Francesco is given a chance to redeem himself.
After being carried by the geryon to the realm of Fraud, Virgil parts ways with Dante, advising him to cross a series of bridges to stop Beatrice from marrying Lucifer. Dante begins to reflect upon his own sins; he realizes his father, family servants, and Beatrice were slain by the husband of the woman whom he had raped. Beatrice is overcome by sorrow at Dante's betrayal; she weds Lucifer and becomes a demon. Beatrice proceeds to attack Dante, overpowering him and forcing him to look into the ninth circle of Treachery, where he sees his greatest sin: allowing her brother to take the blame for his slaughter of the heretic prisoners. Overwhelmed with grief, he gives Beatrice her cross, which he had promised to restore to her upon his return from the Crusade. He begs for forgiveness and pleads with her to once again accept the love of God. She forgives him, and returns to her previous angelic form as she kisses him. An angel descends from Heaven to take her. Beatrice promises they will be together soon, but in order to escape Hell, he will need to face Lucifer alone for he guards Dante’s only escape route against Hell.
Wandering in the caverns of the final circle, Dante traverses through the dark, cold realm searching for a pathway that leads to Lucifer. He meets up with a female soul who tells him that Lucifer resides in the very center of Judecca. He also comes across three Giants of legend: Nimrod, Ephialtes, and Antaeus. Dante comes across a cave filled with huge frozen chains; he mows through them, only to find that he has freed a three-faced demon which appears to be Lucifer's corporeal form. Dante slays the beast and moves toward Purgatory, where his salvation awaits. Lucifer, however, reveals his true corporeal form and easily overpowers Dante. He brags that many heroes, including Ulysses, Alexander, Attila, and Lancelot, had tried to kill him, but none had a soul black enough to allow Lucifer to free himself. He explains that Beatrice was merely bait to lure Dante into Hell to free him from his prison. He vows to enter Purgatory and Paradise and to rend Heaven into a new and greater Hell. Dante realizes he cannot stop Lucifer on his own; he prays and repents and begs for divine forgiveness. Willing to sacrifice his own soul to defeat Lucifer, he pleads for the power to trap Lucifer with him forever. As Lucifer tries to stop Dante from making this pact, an explosive beam of light emanates from Dante, and Lucifer is frozen solid.
Dante dives into the chasm that leads through the earth to Purgatory to be with Beatrice, now "neither completely living, nor completely dead". Later that night, the flesh-emblem of sin he ripped off his chest transforms into a serpent, supposedly Lucifer waiting to get his revenge, that slithers away into the dark distance.
Cast[]
- Graham McTavish - Dante
- Vanessa Branch - Beatrice
- Steve Blum - Lucifer
- Peter Jessop - Virgil
- Mark Hamill - Alighiero, Dante's father
- Victoria Tennant - Bella
- Bart McCarthy - Filippo Argenti
- Kevin Michael Richardson - King Minos, Phlegyas
- John Paul Karliak - Avenger
- Tom Tate - Francesco
- J. Grant Albrecht - Ciacco, Farinata Uberti
- Stephen Apostolina - Walla
- Nika Futterman - Female Prisoner, Lust Minion #4
- Charlotte Cornwell - Nessus, Lust Minion #3
- Vanessa Marshall - Lust Minion #2, Frozen Prisoner
- Grey DeLisle - Lust Minion #1, Dante (as 10 years old)
- H. Richard Greene - Socrates, King Richard I
- John Rees (as Greg Ellis) - Plato
- Shelley O'Neil - Child
- Nicholas Guest - Demon Priest
- Wendy Cutler - unspecified voice
- Lia Sargent - unspecified voice
- Mark Sussman - unspecified voice
- David Zyler (as Dave Zyler) - unspecified voice
Crew[]
Co-Directors (1 each from the various studios)
- Victor Cook
- Mike Disa
- Sang-Jin Kim
- Shûkô Murase
- Jong-Sik Nam
- Lee Seung-Gyu
- Yasuomi Umetsu
- Charlie Adler - Voice Director
Development[]
This section does not cite any sources. (February 2015) |
The film was animated by Film Roman who also animated Dead Space: Downfall, which was also based on an EA game. The Japanese animation studio Production I.G helped animate Hell. A total of six animation studios were involved with the film. It was released on February 9, 2010. The movie is separated into several parts. Each chapter is animated with a different style; Dante is depicted with differing hair length, bodily proportions, and armour.
Reception[]
Anime News Network gave the movie an Overall: B−.
References[]
- ^ Power, Steve (February 19, 2010). "Review - Dante's Inferno (2010) (Blu-ray)". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on February 21, 2010.
- ^ "Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic (Blu-ray / DVD)". Dread Central. January 28, 2010. Archived from the original on February 20, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
External links[]
- Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic at IMDb
- Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic at The Big Cartoon DataBase
- Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- and Details: Anchor Bay's Animated Dante's Inferno Feature
- Animated Dante's Inferno on the Way
- Dante’s Inferno: An Animated Epic review
- 2010 films
- English-language films
- 2010 animated films
- 2010 anime films
- 2010 direct-to-video films
- 2010s American animated films
- American adult animated films
- American animated horror films
- American anthology films
- American films
- Animated films based on video games
- Anime films based on video games
- Demons in film
- The Devil in film
- Film Roman films
- Films based on works by Dante Alighieri
- Films set in hell
- Japanese animated horror films
- Japanese anthology films
- Japanese films
- Manglobe
- Production I.G
- South Korean animated horror films
- South Korean films
- Works based on Electronic Arts video games
- Classical mythology in popular culture
- 2010 horror films
- Horror anime and manga
- American action horror films
- Japanese action horror films
- 2010s fantasy action films
- 2010s action horror films
- Japanese dark fantasy films
- American dark fantasy films
- Japanese animated fantasy films
- Purgatory in fiction
- Fantasy anthology films
- American horror anthology films
- Limbo