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  1. Jun 11, 2013 · Release Date: December 8, 2004Wesley Snipes returns as the day-walking vampire hunter in the explosive third and final film in the Blade franchise, Blade: Tr...

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  2. Blade: Trinity is a 2004 film, written & directed by David S. Goyer, who also wrote the screenplays for the first two Blade movies. It is the third film in the Blade trilogy, following on from Blade and Blade II, and it is based on Blade, and played by Wesley Snipes. The title alludes to the trinity formed between Blade, Hannibal King, and ...

  3. Dec 7, 2004 · Now comes "Blade: Trinity," which is a mess. It lacks the sharp narrative line and crisp comic-book clarity of the earlier films, and descends too easily into shapeless fight scenes that are chopped into so many cuts that they lack all form or rhythm. Advertisement. The setup is a continuation of the earlier films.

  4. Dec 8, 2004 · About. The final hunt begins! Wesley Snipes returns to the war between the living and the undead in the final chapter of the Blade trilogy: One man--part human, part vampire--battles the greatest vampire of all time, and his fate and the fate of humanity hang in the balance in Blade: Trinity. Deep in the desert, the vampires strive to resurrect ...

  5. Ryan Nicholson. ... special makeup effects artist. Cyndi Reece-Thorne. ... makeup and tattoo artist: Wesley Snipes. Danna Rutherford. ... key hair stylist: car chase unit.

  6. Dec 8, 2004 · Feb 3, 2022. Blade: Trinity. Long live the most important vampire! The third film holds the level and remains as dynamic and aggressive as ever. But there are weaknesses, this is what happens with Whistler and the second main antagonist of the film who is presented as the coolest vampire, but in fact he is the level of Deacon Frost.

  7. Blade: Trinity will be remembered for one thing only: How David S. Goyer Buried His Own Franchise. Everything from the supporting cast, the sub-par action set-pieces to the piss-poor MTV-like slo-mo styling - this film is a mess. Goyer taking over his franchise from writer to director, is the killing stroke here - nothing works.