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Blood: The Last Vampire
Set in 1966, Japan, the film tells the story of Saya, the only remaining original vampire, who hunts Chiropterrans, which pose as humans and live only to drink human blood.
15 November 1963, Tokyo, Japan
20 March 1966, Japan
7 December 1963, Tamano City, Okayama, Japan
7 August 1963, Tokyo, Japan
1 February 1934, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
27 July 1956, Los Angeles County, California, USA
5 August 1969, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
29 April 1960, Santa Monica, California, USA
16 December 1953, Denver, Colorado, USA
17 January 1971, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan
1 March 1940
19 October 1948, Park Ridge, Illinois, USA
August 16, 2001
Feels like a pilot episode for the most expensive made-for-cable cartoon ever produced, and if you expect quantity (or closure) for your $8 ticket, you may feel shorted.
July 14, 2009
This 48-minute Japanese animated film earned accolades back in 2000 for being ground-breaking in its technique...but once you get past that small achievement, Blood: The Last Vampire is mediocre at best...
August 22, 2001
The story ... is the sort of convoluted and often incoherent mess that is typical of the genre no doubt, rabid anime fans are better equipped to decipher its intricacies
August 16, 2001
A wickedly bitter animated pill, you'd better leave the kids with a sitter.
August 17, 2001
Is much more effective at evoking a paranoid mood than at telling a coherent story, and the jerky action sequences are among the film's weaker visual elements.
October 25, 2001
A moody, mysterious fright film with a painterly beauty.
September 20, 2001
Blood: The Last Vampire, which clocks in at under 60 minutes, is not only watchable, it's not half bad.
October 25, 2001
Another example of animation that shows just how deep something as seemingly superficial as a cartoon can get.
June 11, 2009
Comes across as a prologue teaser for a yet-to-be-established franchise.
September 29, 2001
...in the wake of an astounding battle scene that literally sweeps the breath out of its viewers, the end credits begin to roll, and we're left wondering, 'that's it?'

