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On September 20th, 2006, the first issue of Rayne's first mini-series was available at comic shops everywhere: "BloodRayne: Plague of Dreams" is a three issue mini-series that was published bi-monthly by Digital Webbing Press, written by Troy Wall with art by Mark Robinson and Stacie Ponder.
On September 20th, 2006, the first issue of Rayne's first mini-series was available at comic shops everywhere: "BloodRayne: Plague of Dreams" is a three issue mini-series that was published bi-monthly by Digital Webbing Press, written by Troy Wall with art by Mark Robinson and Stacie Ponder.

==Plagiarism==
Rayne is an obvious rip off of the 2000AD character Durham Red. They use the same weapons, they dress the same, and they even look the same.In 2000AD prog 1564 it was reviled that 2000AD has sued Terminal Reality, and Majesco over the character and won. Barring the development of anymore Bloodrayne games.



==References==
==References==

Revision as of 01:30, 9 December 2007

Influences

BloodRayne appears to be heavily inspired by Nocturne, an earlier third-person survival horror game by Terminal Reality. The character of BloodRayne is similar to a character in Nocturne called Svetlana, another half-vampire supernatural hunter. In early beta screenshots of BloodRayne, BloodRayne's appearance and costume was almost identical to that of Svetlana's. Additionally, some enemies in BloodRayne (such as the Daemites and bat vampires) originally appeared in Nocturne. The final act of BloodRayne also takes place in the same location (Castle Gaustadt) as the first act of Nocturne. Finally, the concept of the Brimstone Society is very similar to the Spookhouse in Nocturne; and the voice of the Brimstone Society agent from the BloodRayne introduction movie is done by Lynn Mathis who also did the voice of Stranger, the protagonist of Nocturne.

Both Bloodrayne and Svetlana may have been inspired by the character of Durham Red from the comic book 2000 AD, although that has been frequently denied by the TRI representatives when discussed on bloodrayne.co.uk forums[citation needed].

Video games

BloodRayne, developed by Terminal Reality, is a horror-themed third-person action video game released on 15 October 2002 for Nintendo GameCube, Sony PlayStation 2, Microsoft Xbox and for the PC on September 9, 2003. A Mac port was done by Aspyr and released on 6 May 2003, but was plagued with technical problems not seen in other versions, which caused fans to be upset and reviews to be harsh.

It is set in 1933 and 1938 , just before World War II. As an agent of the Brimstone Society, Rayne is sent to a variety of locations (a small swamp town in Louisiana, a Nazi fortress in Argentina, and an ancient castle in Germany) to battle supernatural creatures as well as the Nazi army.

Possibly set in 2004, the game is about Rayne confronting her father vampire, the King of Vampire, Kagan. Denied the pleasure of killing him herself, Rayne spent the last 60 years after the War seeking out and destroying Kagan's other offspring. These offspring, Rayne's half-siblings, have banded together to form a group called the Cult of Kagan. The Cult has created "The Shroud", a substance that can render sun rays harmless to vampires, allowing them to surface at all times of the day, and twists nature into a nightmarish perversion (Trees dying almost instantly, grass catching on fire, corpses twitching). Using "The Shroud", the Cult has pledged to create a new era of vampire supremacy, continuing Kagan's legacy.

BloodRayne PSP (cancelled)

- Majesco announced that one of their upcoming games was going to be a BloodRayne game for the PSP. Little was known, except that it supposedly took place immediately after BloodRayne 2, and would feature a two-player cooperative mode, which would have made it the first game in the series to do so. The game was to cover Rayne's unknown history, and return some old characters (Mynce, Kagan, butcheress etc.) and develop new characters. However, financial difficulties forced Majesco to cancel Bloodrayne for the PSP.[1]

Movies

On January 6, 2006, BloodRayne was released.[2] It features Terminator 3 star Kristanna Loken as Rayne and Ben Kingsley as Kagan. The film's premise was announced as follows: "Set over two centuries before events in the game, the film will follow BloodRayne's quest to stop Kagan's nefarious schemes to slaughter mankind."

The film was directed by Uwe Boll, who was responsible for two other video-game-to-movie adaptations (House of the Dead and Alone in the Dark) which were ill-received by critics. The film received poor reviews, and was declared "an absurd sword-and-sorcery vid-game adaptation from schlock-maestro Uwe Boll, featuring a distinguished (and slumming) cast." by Rotten Tomatoes reviewer consensus.[3]

This film is non-canon for the game series, as it is set over two centuries before the game, and deviates from the game's plot numerous times.

On October 2, 2006, Boll revealed that a follow-up entitled BloodRayne II: Deliverance was gearing up for a January 2007 start date. Unlike the previous film, this time Natassia Malthe would play the part of Rayne. The storyline involves Rayne battling vampires in the Wild West. The movie was released direct to DVD in September of 2007.

Uwe Boll has announced that he will be doing a BloodRayne 3 movie, set during World War II. He also stated that both Kristanna Loken and Natassia Malthe would like to return to portray Rayne in the movie. Filming is supposed to begin in Croatia, spring of 2008.

Comics

As of September 2007, seven BloodRayne one-shot comic books have been published. They are, in order:

  • Skies Afire
  • Seeds of Sin
  • Lycan Rex
  • Dark Soul
  • Twin Blades
  • Tibetan Heights
  • BloodRayne RAW II

On September 20th, 2006, the first issue of Rayne's first mini-series was available at comic shops everywhere: "BloodRayne: Plague of Dreams" is a three issue mini-series that was published bi-monthly by Digital Webbing Press, written by Troy Wall with art by Mark Robinson and Stacie Ponder.

References

  1. ^ BloodRayne PSP (PSP) Gamespy. Retrieved on December 1, 2007
  2. ^ Bloodrayne Variety. Retrieved on December 1, 2007
  3. ^ BloodRayne (2006) Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on December 1, 2007
Movie
Comics