
This isn’t just a film—it’s a full-scale cinematic experience. The Underworld saga returns, and it feels darker, louder, and more ruthless than ever… like the war never actually ended.

Overview: A War That Never Truly Ended
The fragile peace between Vampires and Lycans is gone. Again. But this time, the conflict doesn’t feel like a repetition—it feels like evolution.

In Underworld 6: Rise of the Lycans Queen, ancient bloodlines collapse under the weight of betrayal, and a new power rises from the ruins of old hatred. Selene is pulled back into a war she tried to escape, only to discover that the real enemy might not be either side… but something far more primal.

And then… everything changes when the Lycans reveal a hidden royal lineage that rewrites everything we thought we knew.
A Spectacle Worth Watching on the Big Screen
This is not a quiet return. It’s explosive, gothic, and drenched in shadow-soaked violence.
Kate Beckinsale returns as Selene with that icy precision fans remember—every movement calculated, every glance deadly. She doesn’t just fight; she commands the battlefield like a ghost made of vengeance.
Michael Sheen brings a chilling intensity, embodying a world where Lycan power is no longer chaotic—it’s organized, royal, and terrifyingly intelligent.
The world-building leans hard into gothic horror: crumbling castles, torch-lit fortresses, blood-stained stone corridors, and battlefields where silence feels more dangerous than gunfire.
What Makes It So Visually Addictive?
- Stylized slow-motion combat that feels almost hypnotic
- Practical-meets-digital creature design that actually works
- Blue-black gothic color palette that defines every frame
- Large-scale war sequences that feel chaotic yet controlled
Strengths
- Selene’s return is handled with real weight and presence
- Expanded Lycan mythology adds surprising depth
- Action choreography is sharper and more aggressive than previous entries
- The gothic atmosphere feels fully immersive again
Weaknesses
- The story occasionally leans on familiar franchise patterns
- Some supporting characters don’t get enough development
- Exposition-heavy moments slow down the momentum briefly
The Scene That Stole the Show
There’s a sequence deep inside a collapsing fortress where Selene fights through waves of evolved Lycans while the structure itself is burning from within.
No music. Just breath, metal, claws, and chaos.
And when the Lycan Queen finally reveals herself… the tone of the entire story shifts in seconds. It’s one of those moments that doesn’t just surprise you—it resets everything you thought you understood.
What Viewers Are Saying
- Jason Miller: “Did not expect the franchise to come back this hard. That fortress fight was insane.”
- Emily Carter: “Selene is still one of the coolest characters in modern action cinema.”
- Daniel Brooks: “Dark, stylish, violent… exactly what I wanted from Underworld.”
- Sophia Nguyen: “The Lycan Queen reveal gave me chills. I actually gasped.”
- Mark Thompson: “It feels like the original Underworld energy is finally back.”
- Olivia Harris: “Visually stunning, especially the castle sequences.”
- Ryan Lopez: “Could’ve used more character depth, but the action delivers.”
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Underworld 6 connected to the previous films? Yes, it continues the existing lore while expanding the Lycan mythology.
- Do I need to watch the earlier movies? It helps, but the story is structured to be accessible for new viewers.
- Is it more action or story-driven? It balances both, but leans heavily into action and world-building.
- Is Selene still the main character? Yes, but the Lycan Queen plays a major new role.
- Is it worth watching in theaters? Absolutely—this is designed for big-screen immersion.
Final Verdict
Underworld 6: Rise of the Lycans Queen doesn’t try to reinvent the franchise—it sharpens it. It takes everything fans loved: gothic violence, tragic monsters, eternal war—and pushes it into a more brutal, more mythic direction.
It’s not perfect, but it’s powerful. And in the final moments, when the new queen rises fully into her power… you’re left wondering if Selene is still the hunter—or if the world has finally created something she cannot control.
Rating: A dark, stylish return that reminds us why this universe refuses to die.





