Ultraviolet is based on a script written by American film-maker Kurt Wimmer (who also directed the movie). Wimmer has admitted to getting the idea for the movie from a 1980 movie that centers around a woman and young boy on the run from the Mafia. Viewers also suggest that Wimmer was inspired by comic books and mangas, since the opening credits is a montage of comic book covers. Ultraviolet was subsequently novelized in 2006 by American author Yvonne Navarro.
The song with the female vocal is "24" by Jem.
Gun Kata is a fictional martial art, combining statistical analysis and gunplay, to fight many adversaries at the same time, even when vastly outnumbered. Violet uses Gun Kata when fighting guards throughout the movie. For additional information, see the trivia section here for Wimmer's earlier movie, Equilibrium (2002) (2002).
Her hair and clothes change colour to suit her mood during different scenes.
Even though that most of the new scenes in the unrated version are mere extended plot sequences—mostly running less than a minute—it's probably still the version for people who like the movie to have, because the unrated version improves the balancing by adding extra plot. Also, the new plot scenes surely are deepening the story, and partly they're even evidently important.
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