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Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

Vampirella (1996)
Dark, mysterious and sensual, Vampirella (Talisa Soto) is a princess from the Planet Drakulon. Like all vampires, she needs blood to live, but she will not kill to get it - a synthetic substitute keeps her alive. After journeying across space and time seeking vengeance for her father's brutal murder, she now finds herself on Earth, in Las Vegas, where her enemy Vlad (Roger Daltry) has disguised himself as a rock star. In order to stop Vlad's doomsday plan for world domination, Vampirella must make a dangerous alliance with a group of hi-tech vampire hunters. It's a race to stop the apocalypse of humanity and our fate is in the hands of the fiery, dangerous and beautiful Vampirella.
Dark, mysterious and sensual, Vampirella (Talisa Soto) is a princess from the Planet Drakulon. Like all vampires, she needs blood to live, but she will not kill to get it - a synthetic substitute keeps her alive. After journeying across space and time seeking vengeance for her father's brutal murder, she now finds herself on Earth, in Las Vegas, where her enemy Vlad (Roger Daltry) has disguised himself as a rock star. In order to stop Vlad's doomsday plan for world domination, Vampirella must make a dangerous alliance with a group of hi-tech vampire hunters. It's a race to stop the apocalypse of humanity and our fate is in the hands of the fiery, dangerous and beautiful Vampirella.
The film's central subject matter, a supernatural conflict between good and evil involving an alien protector, is a generic genre trope that lacks inherent political valence. The narrative focuses on individual heroic action to resolve an existential threat, which does not align with specific left or right ideologies.
The film demonstrates significant diversity through the casting of a minority actress in the lead role of a character traditionally depicted as white. The narrative, however, does not appear to explicitly critique traditional identities or center on strong DEI themes.
The film features Vampirella, a female character with superhuman strength and agility, who engages in and wins multiple close-quarters physical fights against male cultists and vampire henchmen, using martial arts and direct physical force.
The character Vampirella, consistently depicted as a white woman in the source comic books, is portrayed by Talisa Soto, an actress of Puerto Rican descent, which constitutes a race swap.
The film 'Vampirella, 1996' does not appear to feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Publicly available plot details and reviews do not indicate any such depictions, leading to an assessment of N/A for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements.
The film "Vampirella, 1996" does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Based on available information, there is no depiction of transgender identity or related narratives within the movie's plot or character arcs.
The film adapts the comic book character Vampirella and her supporting cast. Key characters like Vampirella, Adam Van Helsing, and Pendragon maintain their established genders from the source material, with no significant gender changes for named, plot-relevant characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























