For years, Veronica (Stefani Brown) has been the perfectly spoiled brat
- living life to the fullest without ever paying heed to the consequences,
partying hard, having random sex, and acting as if she's not having a care
in the world. Now that would be bad enough, but it's made even worse by
the fact that she indeed is a vampire, and if partying hard means drinking
human blood and having random sex means having to kill or convert ones
partners afterwards, that will draw attention to the vampire community,
and attention is the last thing the vampire community needs considering it
needs to live undetected among the humans it considers as livestock. Now
the logical step (at least in vampire circles) would be to just kill
Veronica off, but her family carries quite a bit of clout (which allowed
her to live the life she did in the first place), so instead she is given
one more chance: Become a vampire assassin and kill of those vampires
(especially the converted ones) who don't follow vampire law - beginning
with her on-again-off-again boyfriend (Jay Ruzicka) whom she herself
converted ... Further exploring the world of Michael Kazlo II's
earlier Bloodlust, Vampire
Assassin is another fine mix of horror and action, excitement and
gore. Now on a pure plot-level, the film might not read the most
original, but brought to screen, it turns out to be a really well-told
piece of vampire cinema that finds just the right pace between not
overwhelming the viewer with an endless barrage of action on one hand and
not boring the audience with a too detailed description of its vampire
world on the other. The one major complaint about this short in fact is
that it makes one longing for more ...
|