
This isn’t just another sequel trying to revive an old franchise. This feels like a full-scale return to the gothic chaos that made vampire-versus-lycan warfare so addictive in the first place.

And honestly? I wasn’t prepared for how brutal, stylish, and strangely emotional this became once the Lycans Queen entered the story.

A Spectacle Worth Watching on the Big Screen
The moment the film opens, you can feel the atmosphere swallowing you whole. Rain-soaked ruins. Underground kingdoms. Moonlit bloodshed. Every frame looks drenched in darkness.

But what surprised me most wasn’t the action—it was the tension underneath it.
The war between vampires and Lycans no longer feels like a simple survival battle. This time, it feels personal. Dangerous. Like the entire mythology is collapsing from the inside.
Selene returns older, colder, and visibly exhausted by endless conflict. Kate Beckinsale slips back into the role so naturally it almost feels unfair. Some action icons fade over time. She somehow becomes sharper.
And then… the Queen arrives.
That changes everything.
Why This Chapter Feels Different
The Lycans Queen Is the Franchise’s Most Dangerous Villain Yet
Most Underworld villains wanted power.
This one wants transformation.
That’s what makes her terrifying.
She isn’t trying to destroy the vampire race out of revenge alone. She wants to rebuild the entire balance of power and unite the werewolf clans into something unstoppable.
There’s one particular scene deep into the second act—no spoilers—that completely shifts the emotional momentum of the film. It’s quiet. Almost restrained. But it reveals exactly why this war became impossible to stop.
And trust me, audiences are going to talk about that moment.
The Action Feels Brutal Again
One thing fans have missed from modern action fantasy is impact.
This movie brings it back.
The combat here feels vicious and heavy. Sword clashes echo through catacombs. Gunfire tears through ancient halls. Lycans move with animalistic rage instead of CGI weightlessness.
The choreography isn’t clean superhero action. It’s savage.
Exactly what this universe needed.
The Scene That Stole the Show
Without revealing too much, there’s a massive confrontation involving collapsing gothic towers, a blood-red moon, and a betrayal that genuinely caught me off guard.
Not because it was shocking for the sake of shock.
Because the film quietly builds toward it for almost an hour without most viewers realizing.
But here’s what many people will miss the first time watching:
The betrayal isn’t really about choosing sides. It’s about fear of extinction.
That small detail gives the climax far more emotional weight than expected.
What Works Extremely Well
- Kate Beckinsale still completely owns this role
- The gothic atmosphere feels authentic again
- The Lycans Queen is intimidating from her first scene
- Fight choreography feels raw and physical
- The darker emotional tone gives the story surprising depth
- The soundtrack amplifies the tension beautifully
Where the Film Stumbles a Little
- Some supporting characters disappear too quickly
- The middle section slows slightly before the third act explodes
- New viewers may struggle with franchise mythology
Still, none of these issues seriously damage the experience.
Because once the final act begins…
It goes full chaos.
Why Fans of Dark Fantasy Will Love This
This movie understands something many franchises forget:
Style alone isn’t enough anymore.
You need atmosphere. Stakes. Emotional scars.
And surprisingly, this film has all three.
It embraces its gothic identity without trying to become a generic blockbuster. That confidence gives the entire experience personality again.
The visuals are cold and beautiful. The violence feels desperate. And underneath all the bloodshed is a story about legacy, survival, and what endless war does to people who no longer remember peace.
That’s what stayed with me afterward.
What Viewers Are Saying
- Daniel Brooks: “This is the best Underworld movie in YEARS. The final battle was insane.”
- Samantha Reed: “Kate Beckinsale still looks born for this role. Absolute queen energy.”
- Marcus Hale: “I expected fun action. I didn’t expect the story to hit this hard.”
- Olivia Turner: “The Lycans Queen is terrifying. Every scene with her felt intense.”
- Ryan Mitchell: “Dark fantasy fans are going to eat this up.”
- Emily Carter: “That betrayal scene completely shocked me.”
- Jason Bell: “The gothic visuals alone make this worth watching in theaters.”
- Natalie Foster: “Way darker and more emotional than I expected.”
Final Verdict
Some sequels exist because studios want nostalgia.
This one feels like it actually had something left to say.
It’s violent, stylish, emotionally heavier than expected, and fully committed to its gothic fantasy roots. More importantly, it finally raises the stakes high enough to make the war feel dangerous again.
And by the final scene… you realize this universe may never return to balance.
Maybe that’s the point.
Rating: 9.1/10
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the darkest Underworld movie so far?
Yes. The tone is far heavier, more brutal, and emotionally intense compared to earlier entries.
Do I need to watch the previous films first?
It helps, especially for understanding Selene’s history and the vampire-lycan conflict, but the main story remains easy enough to follow.
Is the Lycans Queen a good villain?
Absolutely. She’s easily one of the franchise’s strongest antagonists because her motivations feel larger than revenge.
Does the movie rely too much on CGI?
Not really. The action feels more grounded and physical than many modern fantasy films.
Is it worth seeing in theaters?
If you enjoy gothic action, dark fantasy worlds, and massive cinematic battles, definitely yes.