

Thus Horus sets out on a mission to find a way around this fate in the time he has left. Apparently the Gods have a limit on their immortality and Horus’ is about to run out in seven days.

Into this dystopia arrives a giant floating pyramid housing the Egyptian Gods Horus, Annubis and Bastet. seems to wield unlimited power in the city, carrying out raids of the lower Levels to collect ‘volunteers’ for their experiments while maintaining a stranglehold on the local politics. These experiments have given rise to several sub-classes of humans segregated by being forced to live on certain ‘Levels’ of the city. seems to be using 2095 New York City as some sort of large medical experiment involving everything from artificial organs to mutations and much worse. The world in which Jill finds herself in is some sort of Medical Dictatorship, where the all-powerful Eugenics Corp.

#IMMORTEL AD VITAM DUBLADO MOVIE#
The movie starts out interestingly enough as we meet Jill (Linda Hardy), a woman with bone white skin, blue tears and a wild, blue egg shell hair-do. The look of the film is decidedly post-”Blade Runner” chic, with its soaring cityscapes and flying cars lording over a burned out and dilapidated core, while the story picks and chooses its themes, from vampirism to ancient Egyptian mythology to “Logan’s Run.” I’m personally not familiar with any of Bilal’s work, but from what I can tell from this film, he’s certainly got a vivid imagination. Based on several graphic novels and directed by French comic book artist Enki Bilal, “Immortel” is a strange mix of eclectic and disparate influences and cultural references.
