In the late 21st-century, a vampiric disease modifies some people, imbuing each of them with superhuman strength, intelligence and speed. A beautiful hemophage infected with the virus has to protect a boy in a futuristic world, who is thought to be carrying antigens that would destroy all hemophages.
4 October 1975, Vienna, Austria
18 November 1961, New York City, New York, USA
4 May 1978
1964
4 August 1970, Manila, Philippines
17 December 1975, Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, USSR [now Ukraine]
15 February 1977, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
17 September 1972, London, England, UK
July 11, 1929 in Cheshire, England, UK
December 31, 2012
The repetition of the action scenes play like an avant-garde joke about the indistinguishable nature of Hollywood fight scenes. Think Warhol's soup cans, only with actors posing with swords.
June 24, 2006
Derivative, adolescent tosh.
March 25, 2006
Ultra-dumb.
August 27, 2009
The most receptive audience will mainly be enlightened to know that you can make a movie as thoroughly unprofessional as this one and still get it released in 3,000 theaters.
March 08, 2006
Wimmer borrows all his best ideas from other movies...then spackles over his half-assed plot with a shiny aesthetic.
July 14, 2007
Really, you can't blame Ms. Jovovich.
July 02, 2007
Undemanding, unengaging, and glaringly unoriginal, Ultraviolet gives real comic books a bad name.
April 29, 2009
One of the worst movies of 2006 so far.
January 17, 2010
Woefully nonsensical from start to finish...
March 01, 2007
The narrative is so jumbled that even the actors can't seem to keep track of what exactly is meant to be happening.
March 06, 2007
Despite the expository speeches draped over this like birthday bunting, the story remains largely incomprehensible.
March 08, 2006
Crank your brain to its lowest possible idle and you'll still overthink Ultraviolet.

