Lost Boys: The Thirst

Lost Boys: The Thirst

DVD cover
Directed by Dario Piana
Produced by Basil Iwanyk
Phillip B. Goldfine
Screenplay by Evan Charnov
Hans Rodionoff
Story by Evan Charnov
Based on characters from
The Lost Boys  
by Janice Fischer &
James Jeremias
Starring Corey Feldman
Jamison Newlander
Tanit Phoenix
Sean Michael
Joe Vaz
Music by Elia Cmiral
Cinematography Stefano Morcaldo
Edited by Tony Solomons
Production
company
ApolloMovie Beteiligungs
Film Afrika Worldwide
Hollywood Media Bridge
Distributed by Warner Premiere
Release dates
  • October 12, 2010
Running time
81 minutes
Country United States
South Africa
Language English

Lost Boys: The Thirst is a 2010 action horror film directed by Dario Piana[1] and stars Corey Feldman, Tanit Phoenix and Jamison Newlander.[2] It is the second sequel to the 1987 American vampire horror film The Lost Boys. It is also the third and final installment in The Lost Boys trilogy.

Plot

Edgar and Alan Frog interrupt a half-vampire Senator who is killing a Congressman to finish his transformation. In the ensuing chaos, Alan is forced to drink vampire blood, which will make him a half-vampire.

Five years later in San Cazador, California, Edgar is facing eviction from his trailer and tries to raise funds by selling his collection of old comic books to his friend Zoe, who works at a local comics shop. While there, a famous blogger named Johnny Trash enters; Zoe explains that Johnny is there for a rave that's going on in the town.

Back at his trailer, Edgar is approached by Gwen Lieber, a writer of romantic vampire novels, whose brother Peter was kidnapped during a rave in Ibiza, Spain, and she suspects vampiric activity. She gives him a vial of a drug called "The Thirst" which is given to people at raves hosted by a person known as "DJ X"; he determines that it is vampire blood. Gwen offers him a large sum of money to rescue her brother, but he turns it down.

DJ X and his associates are transporting Peter—bound and drugged—in a small plane. DJ X and three others jump from the plane in flight, landing safely to meet Johnny Trash for a live interview. DJ X mauls Johnny afterward, since the blogger had served his purpose in promoting the rave online.

Edgar visits Alan, who is now half-vampire and satisfies his thirst for blood by feeding on animal blood acquired in his job as a taxidermist. Edgar tries to enlist Alan's aid in stopping DJ X from raising an army through his raves, but he refuses, having lost all hope that he can be saved and believing that the whole Alpha Vampire theory is just a "neverending pyramid scheme".

Remembering his youthful days with Alan and Sam Emerson, Edgar resolves to take the job alone but Gwen introduces him to Lars Van Goetz, a former reality TV star hoping to use the mission to make him famous again; Edgar reluctantly accepts his help.

After a visit to Sam's grave (who Edgar was forced to kill when he turned into a vampire), in which Edgar returns to Sam the Batman #14 that Sam had boasted having when they met, Edgar finds that Alan has left him a book of vampire history to help in his mission. Edgar gives the book to Zoe to research. She is attacked by a vampire, but she and Edgar defeat it, and she explains what she has learned about a ritual sacrifice during a Blood Moon, such as the one that will occur the night of the rave.

Congressman Blake, now Edgar's weapons designer (for a fee) outfits Edgar and Zoe for battle. After fighting off an attack on Blake's house, they meet up with Gwen, Lars, and Claus, and set off for the island where the rave is taking place. Leaving Gwen behind for her safety, the remaining four go inside in search of Peter. Lars finds him, but thinking that the whole thing is staged, leaves Peter to rescue him at a more dramatic time. As they fight various vampires, Lars has his heart ripped out by one of them and Edgar is injured but rejoins Gwen, Claus, and Zoe in returning to the building.

DJ X is distributing The Thirst to the crowd, and preparing to sacrifice Peter. Edgar takes on DJ X, and is narrowly saved by the timely arrival of Alan. The vampire hunters rally, and Edgar impales DJ X with a resin spike grenade (a weapon stolen from Area 51 by Congressman Blake) before he and Alan finish him off with swords through the heart.

To their surprise, the death of DJ X doesn't cause the half-vampires to revert. They discover that Peter was the real alpha vampire (and Gwen is not his sister), whose power DJ X was attempting to extract. Gwen's rescue mission was also a ruse to bring Edgar to Peter, who wanted him to become his personal vampire hit-man, to keep other vampires under control. Peter kills Gwen instead of turning her like she wanted and orders the other vampires to kill Edgar and the rest. Peter attempts to use his partial control over Alan against Edgar, but Edgar douses Peter with water which he simultaneously blesses into holy water, destroying Peter and returning everyone else to normal.

Later, as Alan enjoys getting his first suntan in years, Zoe and Edgar reflect on their adventure. Edgar wonders about her knowledge that vampires were real, which she dismisses as "a hunch". Edgar comments about something he's just read about werewolves being able to transform at any time, and the audience is teased with the sight of her eyes becoming wolflike.

Cast

Production

Filming began on location in South Africa in November 2009.[3] Corey Haim had originally confirmed that he would not be participating in the film, citing a very busy schedule. He had said he was looking forward to coming back for a fourth film, before his death in March 2010.[4] It is the second sequel to the original 1987 film The Lost Boys, following Lost Boys: The Tribe.[5] In this sequel, Corey Feldman and Jamison Newlander reprise their roles again as Edgar and Alan Frog.[6]

Release and reception

It was released as a direct-to-video film in October 2010.[7] Warner Premiere set the DVD and Blu-ray release for October 12, 2010.[8] It received negative reviews from critics and currently holds a 0 percent rating on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.[9]

See also

References

External links