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1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Crew  





4 References  





5 External links  














Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic






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Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic
Directed by
  • Shūkō Murase
  • Yasuomi Umetsu
  • Victor Cook
  • Jong-Sik Nam
  • Kim Sang-jin
  • Lee Seung-Gyu
  • Written byBrandon Auman
    Based onDivine Comedy
    byDante Alighieri and
    Dante's Inferno
    byVisceral Games
    Produced by
    • Cho Yongjoo
  • Joe Goyette
  • Chung Hyun
  • Mitsuhisa Ishikawa
  • Starring
  • Vanessa Branch
  • Peter Jessop
  • Steve Blum
  • Music byChristopher Tin

    Production
    companies

    Starz Media
    Film Roman
    Electronic Arts
    Visceral Games
    Production I.G
    Dong Woo Animation
    Manglobe
    JM Animation
    MOI Animation
    Digital eMation
    BigStar

    Distributed byAnchor Bay Entertainment
    Manga Entertainment

    Release date

    • February 9, 2010 (2010-02-09)

    Running time

    88 minutes
    CountriesUnited States
    Japan
    South Korea
    Singapore
    LanguageEnglish

    Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic is a 2010 adult animated dark fantasy film. Based on the Dante's Inferno video game that is itself loosely based on Dante's Inferno,[1][2] Dante must travel through the circles of Hell and battle demons, creatures, monsters, and even Lucifer himself to save his beloved Beatrice. The film was released on February 9, 2010.

    Plot[edit]

    Returning from the Third Crusade (1189–1192), Dante arrives home to find his servants slain, his father dead and his beloved fiancee Beatrice dying of a stab wound to the stomach. As she dies, lucifer plucks Beatrice into the gates of Hell and Dante gives chase. Virgil appears and offers to guide him through Hell. They board Charon, a demonic, living ferry that takes souls to the First Circle of Hell. Charon commands demons to attack Dante, as no living being is allowed to enter. Dante fights them off, kills Charon, and steers him into the first circle, Limbo.

    In Limbo, Dante learns Beatrice was pregnant with his child while he was away, but miscarried. Attacked by demonic children, he and Virgil escape into a large building; they enter a hall of great rulers, philosophers, and thinkers. Moving on, they battle King Minos, whose task is to send condemned souls to their sin's corresponding circle of Hell.

    In the second circle, Lust, Dante is reminded that he was once unfaithful to Beatrice. Upon hearing this, Beatrice begins to lose faith.

    The pair come to a grotto where men and women who had lived their lives in gluttony are devoured by Cerberus, the great hound of Hell. Virgil tells Dante that the only way to the next circle is from within the beast, so Dante allows himself to be eaten. He encounters Ciacco, a man from his village, who confesses to gluttony; Dante tells him to be free and blesses him with his cross. Dante attacks and destroys the hound's heart to escape.

    In the fourth circle, Greed, Dante confronts his father Alighiero di Bellincione. The pair trade barbs with each other and Dante kicks his father into a vat of boiling gold.

    In the fifth circle, Wrath (shown as Anger in the movie in a subtitle and spoken by Virgil), Dante recognizes Filippo Argenti who taunts him, only to be brought down by other wrathful spirits. Dante sees Lucifer in the city of Dis; he announces to the city's damned souls his intent to marry Beatrice.

    In the sixth circle, heretics do forever burn in fire and are tortured. Dante meets and kills his rival Farinata.

    Upon entering Violence and given passage through the PhlegethonbyNessus, Dante descends into the Forest of Suicides upon hearing a familiar cry, soon finding his mother growing from the sapling of a tree. Believing that she had died of a fever, Dante is overwhelmed with sorrow; he uses his cross to free her soul.

    In the realm of Fraud, Virgil parts ways with Dante, and Dante begins to reflect upon his own sins. Beatrice weds Lucifer and becomes a demon. Beatrice attacks Dante, forcing him to look into the ninth circle of Treachery, where he sees his greatest sin: allowing her brother to take the blame for his slaughter of the heretic prisoners. Overwhelmed with grief, he gives Beatrice her cross and pleads with her to accept the love of God. She forgives him and promises that they will be together soon, but in order to escape Hell, he will need to face Lucifer alone.

    Dante realizes that he cannot stop Lucifer on his own; he begs for divine forgiveness. An explosive beam of light emanates from Dante, and Lucifer is frozen solid.

    In the final scene, Dante dives into the chasm that leads through the earth to Purgatory to be with Beatrice, now "neither completely living, nor completely dead". He rips off his tapestry, which then disintegrates and transforms into the Hebrew serpent, slithering away, as Lucifer hauntingly laughs, implying that he is biding his time for revenge.

    Cast[edit]

    Graham McTavish and Vanessa Branch voiced Dante and Beatrice respectively both in the video game and in the animation.
  • Vanessa BranchBeatrice
  • Steve BlumLucifer
  • Peter JessopVirgil
  • Mark HamillAlighiero, Dante's father
  • Victoria Tennant – Bella
  • Bart McCarthy – Filippo Argenti
  • Kevin Michael Richardson – King Minos, Phlegyas
  • John Paul Karliak – Avenger
  • Tom Tate – Francesco
  • J. Grant Albrecht – Ciacco, Farinata Uberti
  • Stephen Apostolina – Walla
  • Nika Futterman – Female Prisoner, Lust Minion #4
  • Charlotte CornwellNessus, Lust Minion #3
  • Vanessa Marshall – Lust Minion #2, Frozen Prisoner
  • Grey DeLisle – Lust Minion #1, Dante (as 10 years old)
  • H. Richard GreeneSocrates, King Richard I
  • John Rees (as Greg Ellis) – Plato
  • Shelley O'Neil – Child
  • Nicholas Guest – Demon Priest
  • Wendy Cutler – unspecified voice
  • Lia Sargent – unspecified voice
  • Mark Sussman – unspecified voice
  • David Zyler (as Dave Zyler) – unspecified voice
  • Crew[edit]

    Co-directors (1 each from the various studios)

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Power, Steve (February 19, 2010). "Review – Dante's Inferno (2010) (Blu-ray)". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on February 21, 2010.
  • ^ "Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic (Blu-ray / DVD)". Dread Central. January 28, 2010. Archived from the original on February 20, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dante%27s_Inferno:_An_Animated_Epic&oldid=1233774536"

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    This page was last edited on 10 July 2024, at 20:44 (UTC).

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