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Monday, April 27, 2026

The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) – Review

Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame is perhaps the most ambitious animated film the studio ever attempted during its Renaissance era. Based on Victor Hugo’s dark and tragic novel, the film dares to tackle mature themes such as religious hypocrisy, persecution, lust, and genocide, all within the constraints of a Disney musical. Yeah, that was always going to be a problem, but could the people at Disney crack such a conundrum?

Set in 15th-century Paris, Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame follows Quasimodo (Tom Hulce), a kind-hearted but deformed bell ringer who has spent his entire life hidden away in the Notre Dame Cathedral. Raised by the cruel and self-righteous Judge Claude Frollo (Tony Jay), Quasimodo has been taught that the outside world would never accept him. Despite this, he longs to experience life beyond the cathedral walls. Encouraged by his gargoyle friends: Victor (Charles Kimbrough), Hugo (Jason Alexander), and Laverne (Mary Wickes), Quasimodo sneaks out to attend the Festival of Fools. 

Things go about as expected.

At the festival, he is initially celebrated but soon mocked and humiliated by the crowd. Then, before things can get out of hand, he is quickly rescued by Esmeralda (Demi Moore), a defiant and compassionate Romani woman, who openly challenges Frollo’s authority. Enraged, Frollo declares her a fugitive, obsessed with either possessing her or destroying her. Meanwhile, Captain Phoebus (Kevin Kline), Frollo’s newly appointed soldier, begins to question his leader’s cruelty. When ordered to hunt down Esmeralda and her people, Phoebus defies Frollo, ultimately joining forces with Esmeralda and Quasimodo.

“We can become Musketeers!”

Frollo eventually discovers the hidden Romani refuge, captures Esmeralda, and sentences her to be burned at the stake. Quasimodo, overcoming his fears, rescues her and leads a rebellion against Frollo’s tyranny. In a climactic confrontation inside the burning cathedral, Frollo meets his demise, and Quasimodo finally steps into the world as a hero. In the end, Paris embraces Quasimodo for who he is, proving that true worth is not defined by appearance but by the heart. Thus, we get a storybook ending where good triumphs over evil with compassion and understanding winning out in the end, basically, a classic Disney animated feature.

And the children shall lead them.

Where this film stumbles is in its uneven tone. The film aspires to be a serious adaptation of Hugo’s novel, dealing with adult themes in a way that would make even Beauty and the Beast or The Lion King look tame in comparison. However, it’s still a Disney movie, and that means forced comedic elements that clash with the film’s darker moments, with the most glaring offenders being the gargoyles who exist solely for comic relief. Their slapstick antics and out-of-place humour feel jarring against a backdrop of murder, religious zealotry, and societal oppression. The tonal whiplash is never more apparent than in a scene where Quasimodo is publicly humiliated in front of a jeering crowd, followed moments later by the gargoyles cracking jokes about pigeons. The contrast is so severe that it undermines the film’s emotional weight, and for those who haven’t read the book, it may surprise you that there are “No talking gargoyles in Victor Hugo’s novel!”

“Maybe we were in an earlier draft.”

Needless to say, there are significant alterations between Victor Hugo’s 1831 novel “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” and Disney’s 1996 animated adaptation. While the Disney film is about an unlikely hero who saves the people and city he loves and, in turn, helps us to see people for who they are rather than how they appear, Victor Hugo’s novel is more a scathing indictment of Paris and the people of that era. Below, I’ve listed a few key differences between the Disney film and Victor Hugo’s novel.

“Sanctuary!”

Tones and Themes:

• Hugo’s Novel: A dark and tragic tale exploring fate, justice, societal cruelty, and the power of the church. It’s heavily critical of medieval Parisian society.
• Disney’s Version: While darker than most Disney films, it’s still a family-friendly adaptation, emphasizing themes of self-acceptance, love, and triumph over prejudice.

Character Differences:

Quasimodo

• Novel: He is deaf, more deformed, and a tragic figure, utterly devoted to Esmeralda, yet ultimately alone.
• Disney: He’s gentler, more expressive, and remains hopeful, finding happiness among friends.

Esmeralda

• Novel: A 16-year-old Romani girl, beautiful and kind, but naive. She falls in love with Captain Phoebus and is ultimately hanged for a crime she didn’t commit.
• Disney: An independent, fearless, and compassionate woman who fights for justice. She survives at the end and has a romantic relationship with Phoebus.

Claude Frollo

• Novel: An archdeacon obsessed with both religious devotion and his lust for Esmeralda, leading him to commit heinous acts that lead to his ultimate downfall.
• Disney: A judge, rather than a priest, who is outright villainous. His religious hypocrisy is toned down, but he remains obsessed with Esmeralda, singing Hellfire, one of Disney’s darkest songs.

Phoebus

• Novel: A shallow, womanizing soldier who seduces Esmeralda but does not love her. He survives an attempted assassination and lets Esmeralda be executed.
• Disney: A heroic and noble captain who falls in love with Esmeralda and helps Quasimodo in his fight against Frollo’s tyranny.

Treatment of Religion:

• Novel: Religion is depicted with complexity, showing both its corrupting influence (Frollo’s obsession) and its redemptive aspects (Quasimodo’s devotion).
• Disney: The film simplifies the religious aspect, making Frollo a purely evil hypocrite, while religion itself is not deeply explored.

Plot and Ending:

• Novel: The story ends in tragedy. Esmeralda is wrongfully executed, Quasimodo kills Frollo in despair, and he later dies beside Esmeralda’s body, crawling inside her coffin to be with her.
• Disney: The film has a happy ending. Esmeralda and Phoebus end up together, Quasimodo is accepted by society, and Frollo dies in poetic justice. 

 

The film also adds the obligatory action scene.

So yeah, Disney took a “few” liberties with the source material, but the film’s ending is easily the biggest compromise. Hugo’s original novel is a tragedy, with Quasimodo dying beside Esmeralda’s lifeless body. Disney’s version opts for a feel-good finale where Quasimodo is accepted by society, which, while heartwarming, feels thematically inconsistent with the rest of the film. Up until that point, Hunchback had been about injustice, intolerance, and the cruelty of the masses, yet it ends with the crowd suddenly welcoming Quasimodo with open arms. It’s a resolution that feels too easy, too clean. Also, when he was pouring all that molten lead on the mob, he didn’t seem all that concerned for “friendly fire” as it would have engulfed more than just Frollo’s men. Would that have been so easily forgiven?

Question: Just how much molten lead did they have up on the roof of Notre Dame? This looks more like a volcanic eruption than a siege tactic.

Despite its G-rated label, The Hunchback of Notre Dame delves into surprisingly dark territory, tackling themes of religious corruption, prejudice, genocide, and repressed lust, most notably in the haunting song “Hellfire,” where Frollo battles his own desires for Esmeralda. Tony Jay’s voice performance imbues the character with chilling gravitas, making him one of Disney’s most sinister and complex villains. Meanwhile, Quasimodo’s internal struggle is beautifully captured in “Out There,” a soaring anthem of longing and self-discovery.


There’s no denying Hunchback is one of Disney’s most visually striking entries; it is a stunning film, with sweeping shots of Notre Dame and rich Gothic-inspired animation that give the story a grand, operatic feel. Alan Menken’s score and Stephen Schwartz’s lyrics elevate the film’s emotional depth, making songs like “God Help the Outcasts” resonate beyond the screen. The Gothic architecture of Notre Dame is rendered with a level of detail and grandeur rarely seen in traditional animation. The use of light, shadow, and colour, especially in sequences like “Sanctuary” and “Hellfire”, creates a mood far darker and more atmospheric than typical Disney fare.

Note: The “Hellfire” number that explores Frollo’s feelings of lust and shame is the most sexually charged piece of animation the Disney studio ever produced.

Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame is an undeniably bold experiment, and in many ways, it deserves praise for its ambition. It tackles themes that most animated films wouldn’t dare approach, boasts some of Disney’s best visuals and music, and features one of the studio’s most compelling villains. But its inconsistent tone, unnecessary comic relief, and compromised ending prevent it from reaching true greatness. It is a film at war with itself—torn between the desire to tell a mature, weighty story and the need to conform to Disney’s family-friendly formula.

“Can we fit a few more fart and poop jokes into the script?”

Ultimately, it is an admirable, if uneven, Disney adaptation, one that dares to explore weighty themes and delivers some of the studio’s most breathtaking visuals and music. However, its conflicting tones, balancing mature drama with forced comic relief, prevent it from fully realizing its potential. While not a flawless film, it remains one of Disney’s most daring and thought-provoking works.

 

Does Euro Disney have a Quasimodo attraction?

Overall, Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame drastically alters the tone and conclusion of Hugo’s novel, turning a tragic historical drama into an uplifting and adventurous animated feature. Where the novel is a tragic social commentary, the Disney film is a hopeful story about acceptance and love. Both versions explore similar themes but with vastly different tones and endings. While it remains an impressive and often overlooked entry in Disney’s Renaissance era, it ultimately plays things too safe, diluting the novel’s raw power in favour of a more conventional Disney formula.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The 10th Victim (1965) – Review

Pop-art satire, screwball romance, and a bra that doubles as a firearm, The 10th Victim is the kind of science fiction only the swinging ’60s could produce. A film that takes a gleefully cynical look at a future where legalized man-hunting is the ultimate sport and the ultimate advertising opportunity. What follows is a stylish, absurd, and surprisingly sharp commentary on consumer culture, celebrity, and the fine art of killing in style.

Based on a short story by Robert Sheckley, the film is set in the 21st century, following the devastation of World War III, and society has devised a radical solution to curb further violence: “The Big Hunt.” This lethal competition allows those with violent tendencies to channel their aggression into a public spectacle, alternating between hunter and victim roles across ten rounds. The last survivor emerges enormously wealthy, gaining fame, fortune, and the chance to retire from the brutal game.

 

Most don’t get a chance to retire.

Enter Caroline Meredith (Ursula Andress), a glamorous and deadly pro who’s just one kill away from freedom, and Marcello Poletti (Marcello Mastroianni), a charmingly exhausted victim whose best weapon is his awkward “please don’t kill me before lunch” vibe, and who’s winnings from six kills have already been spent by his mistress, Olga (Elsa Martinelli), and his ex-wife, Lidia (Luce Bonifassy). Their chase through mid-’60s Rome looks like a flashy, high-fashion rom-com with neon costumes, slick futuristic sets, and so much product placement it’s basically one long commercial. The movie’s big joke? If you can slap a logo on it, you can justify blowing it up.

 

“If Ms. Meredith doesn’t kill you, ennui most likely will.”

Having secured a significant sponsorship from the Ming Tea Company, because a little extra cash on the side is never a bad thing, Caroline fakes being a reporter investigating Italian men’s love lives to get close to Marcello at the Temple of Venus. Marcello, ever the clever cat, sets up a crocodile attack for rival TV cameras, because why not? Caroline escapes, then lures Marcello to the beach with a fake love song and a sneaky drug dose. Back at the Temple, a live TV gunfight unfolds, but surprise! Marcello’s bullets are blanks, and Caroline’s dress is bulletproof. Instead of killing each other, they decide to ditch the game, hop on a plane, and get hitched via “shotgun” wedding.

 

And they lived lethally ever after.

Stray Observations:

“Why have birth control when you can have death control?” This slogan for The Big Hunt is probably a few years away from actually happening.
• It’s highly improbable that someone who has survived nine hunts could pretend to be a reporter to get close to her prey. Do they not have Google in this dystopia?
• This movie prefigured dystopian stories where violence and media spectacle merge, influencing later sci-fi like The Hunger Games and The Running Man.
• It’s obvious that this movie greatly inspired Mike Myers in creating the Austin Powers films. The fake band Ming Tea in the first installment was named after a product that Caroline Meredith was asked to advertise.
• Robert Sheckley’s original story is actually called The Seventh Victim, but that, of course, was already the title of a famous horror film directed by Mark Robson in the 1940s.
• The prize for surviving ten hunts is one million dollars, which even by 1960s standards doesn’t seem like a lot of money for almost getting killed, repeatedly.

 

I bet membership fees to these kinds of clubs cost that much.

Directed by Elio Petri, The 10th Victim doesn’t so much build a believable future as stage a glamorous, high-budget photo shoot come to life. Every frame looks like the cover of a ’60s sci-fi paperback—blocky fonts, silver jumpsuits, and serious stares into the void. Rome gets a sleek retro-futurist makeover, all sharp angles and odd architecture as if designed by someone obsessed with triangles. But the real star here is the visual humour: the infamous bra-gun (because why shouldn’t lingerie be deadly?), a murder broadcast live with the cheer of a cooking show, and bystanders calmly sipping cocktails while assassins fire away without spilling a drop. Assassination is just another elegant form of dinner theatre—complete with valet parking—and Petri layers this pop-art spectacle with ironic flair that’s less set dressing and more the very lifeblood of the film’s biting satire.

 

“Joey, do you like movies about gladiators?”

The film also treats its violence the way a luxury catalogue treats home décor: tastefully lit, impeccably staged, and available in a range of colours to match your living room. Every kill looks like it’s been art-directed within an inch of its life, perfect angles, impeccable framing, maybe even a soft-focus lens if the sponsor’s paying extra. Gunfire doesn’t just erupt; it arrives like a perfectly timed pyrotechnic at a fashion show. Ursula Andress doesn’t so much hunt as she performs the hunt, turning murder into a lifestyle segment complete with costume changes and brand tie-ins.

 

I love futuristic fashions like this.

As for the casting, saying Ursula Andress as Caroline was picture perfect in the role would be a vast understatement, she’s like a logo brought to life, all precision and lethal glamour, as if she could sell you perfume and a handgun in the same breath. Marcello Mastroianni, meanwhile, brings the Italian superpower of looking effortlessly good while appearing mildly inconvenienced by mortal danger. Together, their chemistry is a dance of banter, seduction, and sudden ambush, keeping the film from becoming a one-note gag and giving it a sly, human heartbeat beneath all the chic, polished danger. It’s this breezy, flirtatious energy that keeps the film from becoming just an extended gag—there’s always something human, and a little absurd, under the glamour.

 

“How can you nap at a time like this?”

The satire is feather-light in tone but sharp in its observations. The Big Hunt is reality TV before reality TV existed, influencer culture before ring lights, and corporate morality before the word “morality” needed scare quotes. The bureaucratic absurdity—permits, sponsorships, artistic direction for killings—feels disturbingly plausible. The jaunty lounge score only deepens the irony, making it impossible not to tap your foot while society sells murder as prime-time entertainment. In The 10th Victim, death is never messy, inconvenient, or—heaven forbid—unattractive. It’s a curated experience, polished until the blood practically coordinates with the drapes. People don’t just die—they die on brand, and you can practically imagine the catalogue copy: “This season’s most desirable exit, brought to you by the makers of fine champagne.”  It’s also important to remember…

 

You do not give Ursula Andress a hard time.

In conclusion, The 10th Victim is a candy-coloured satire with teeth, a film that dresses up its social critique in pop-art glamour and then slips the knife in while you’re admiring the décor. Petri crafts a future that’s less about predicting what’s to come and more about holding a funhouse mirror to the present: consumerism, celebrity culture, and the way spectacle sanitizes even the ugliest acts. It’s stylish without being hollow, witty without being smug, and anchored by two stars who could make mutual assassination look like foreplay. Half screwball romance, half corporate death match, it’s proof that sometimes the sharpest social commentary comes wrapped in a bra-gun and a smile.

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Seventh Victim (1943) – Review

Val Lewton’s The Seventh Victim is one of those films that has all the ingredients for greatness, an eerie premise, shadow-drenched cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca, and a mystery steeped in paranoia, yet somehow manages to feel oddly inert. At just 71 minutes, it should move like a sharp little shocker, but instead it wanders, circling around its characters and atmosphere without ever fully committing to horror or suspense.

The story begins with Mary Gibson (Kim Hunter) receiving the worst kind of school news: her sister, Jacqueline (Jean Brooks), has not only vanished but has also stopped paying the tuition at her prestigious boarding school. With nowhere else to turn, Mary heads for New York to track her down. There she discovers Jacqueline has mysteriously sold off her cosmetics company, La Sagesse, and left behind nothing but worried friends, unanswered questions, and a creepy, empty apartment above a Greenwich Village restaurant, furnished only with a chair and a dangling noose, like something out of a DIY horror starter kit. At Dante, the restaurant below, Mary also meets Jason Hoag (Erford Gage), a failed poet who offers to help in that particular brand of “I’m totally not suspicious” way. Things get even more interesting when private investigator Irving August (Lou Lubin) is warned off the case, but this only makes him decide to work for free. Sadly, he should have taken the warning.

 

“Does this mean you’re off the case?”

As Mary digs deeper, the cast of oddballs grows: Gregory Ward (Hugh Beaumont), Jacqueline’s secret husband-slash-lawyer; Dr. Louis Judd (Tom Conway), a psychiatrist who moonlights as an expositor of doom; and Frances Fallon (Isabel Jewell), a friend whose loyalty leans toward the melodramatic. Together they paint a picture of Jacqueline’s decline, which includes joining — and trying to ditch — a Satanic cult called the Palladists. The Palladists, however, are less “terrifying forces of darkness” and more “unpleasant dinner party guests with a death wish agenda.” They don’t actually kill their victims; they just nag them into suicide. It’s like hell, as if run by a passive-aggressive book club. Is this their idea of striking fear into the hearts of men?

 

It could be worse; they could be Scientologists.

These Satanists call themselves pacifists, which is admirable in theory but laughably ineffective when you’re supposed to represent the forces of darkness. Their most sinister act? Hauling a corpse through the New York subway like it’s just another suitcase. The Dark Lords of Hell, it seems, couldn’t scrape together cab fare, let alone a hearse. So there they sit beneath flickering fluorescent lights, swaying with the rhythm of the train, a body slumped between them as though death itself had bought a ticket. Commuters glance up, then quickly away, because in this city, even eternal damnation has to squeeze onto public transit.

 

“Nothing to see here, folks. Next stop, the abyss.”

The climax brings Mary, Gregory, Jason, and Judd face-to-face with Jacqueline, just as the Palladists gather to debate her fate in tones better suited to bylaws than black masses. Jacqueline, fragile and haunted, is pressured toward poison, cornered by knives, and hounded by cultists who confuse “evil” with “annoying persistence.” Even Frances pleads for mercy, but bureaucracy wins out. Jacqueline slips their grasp long enough to share a bittersweet hallway moment with her neighbour Mimi (Elizabeth Russell), who, despite being terminally ill, still has better weekend plans. Jacqueline, however, chooses the chair and the noose waiting in her room. As Mimi heads out for one last night on the town, she hears the unmistakable sound of furniture tipping, a final, grim punctuation to the tale of a sister who vanished into shadows and never returned.

 

“You were expecting a happy ending?”

Stray Observations:

• Tom Conway recreates his character of Dr. Judd from 1942’s Cat People, but as his character died in that film, I’m not sure what he’s doing here.
• This was Kim Hunter’s first screen role, years before she won an Oscar for A Streetcar Named Desire and later went on to Planet of the Apes fame. Talk about range.
• The Satanist group is modelled less on Gothic cults and more on genteel society clubs, hence their bizarre combination of tea-sipping manners and death threats.
• The film features one of the earliest and eeriest “shower scenes” in cinema, predating Psycho by nearly 20 years, though Hitchcock’s version came with far sharper cutlery.
• Val Lewton was notorious for injecting a sense of bleakness and mortality into his horror films. The Seventh Victim might be his most morbid. Except, of course, for that subway body delivery service.
• The 1968 horror thriller Rosemary’s Baby would take some of this film’s elements and move the setting to the Upper West Side of New York City.

 

Luckily, no one gets knocked up by Satan in this film.

Visually, though, the film is nothing short of mesmerizing. Nicholas Musuraca, already proving himself a master of shadow and suggestion in Cat People, creates an atmosphere where every frame feels like it could collapse into darkness at any moment. Staircases disappear into black voids, doorways become ominous portals, and cramped New York apartments feel less like safe havens and more like cages of despair. The stark contrasts of light and shadow are not just stylish window dressing; they embody the paranoia and isolation eating away at the characters. In many ways, The Seventh Victim foreshadows the visual language of film noir, with its expressionistic lighting and claustrophobic cityscapes.

 

Don’t expect subtle foreshadowing.

If atmosphere alone made a film, this would be a minor masterpiece. Musuraca’s cinematography drips with unease, making even the simple act of walking down a hallway feel like a confrontation with death itself. Where Cat People transformed the ordinary into something uncanny, as the famous swimming pool sequence still chills decades later, and I Walked with a Zombie married gothic atmosphere to a lush, dreamlike narrative, The Seventh Victim seems content to gesture toward dread without ever fully delivering on it. The images haunt, but the story stumbles.

 

“Is that you, Mrs. Bates?”

The central mystery—Mary’s search for her missing sister—starts with promise but soon unravels into a tangle of whispered conversations and half-formed clues that never connect. By the time the so-called climax arrives, it doesn’t feel like a revelation so much as the writers quietly giving up and turning off the lights. Lewton at his best uses ambiguity to cut like a knife; here, it just hangs in the air like secondhand smoke, suffocating rather than sharpening the tension. And then there’s the romance subplot, shoehorned in with all the grace of a studio memo. Supposedly, it’s there to soften the despair, but all it really does is gum up the pacing and dilute the dread. Musuraca’s shadow-soaked cinematography fights valiantly to keep the mood intact, but even his brilliance can’t disguise a story that loses its nerve.

 

If he is your love interest, evil is the better option.

It’s safe to say that Mark Robson directs with a good eye for paranoia, but even with the shadowy cinematography and the excellent Hunter in the lead, the pacing often feels like it’s spinning in circles. By the end, the bleak themes of suicide, despair, and moral futility are more striking than the supposed villainy of the Satanist club, who mostly feel like they should be passing around cookies instead of summoning demons. Where The Seventh Victim does succeed is in its haunting tone. There’s a quiet fatalism at its core; suicide, despair, and the fragility of faith all hang over the story. That bleakness makes it one of Lewton’s most unusual productions, even if it doesn’t entirely work as entertainment.

 

It’s not paranoia if they’re really out to get you.

In the end, The Seventh Victim is a well-shot, competently acted little potboiler that ultimately undermines itself with narrative missteps and a curiously toothless villainous sect. For fans of Lewton’s atmospheric chillers, it’s worth watching for the visuals and mood alone. For others, it may prove frustrating, one that is more interesting in concept than in execution.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale (2007) – Review

There are bad ideas, and then there’s Uwe Boll staring into the cinematic void and declaring himself its king. With In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale, Boll, or as I like to imagine him introducing himself at parties, Uwe “I’m the only genius in the industry” Boll, makes another glorious attempt at translating a video game to the big screen. To absolutely no one’s surprise, he once again delivers a large, steaming pile of cinematic dung that probably had half the cast quietly googling “how to remove film from IMDb” between takes.

The story centres on a farmer who is named Farmer (Jason Statham), because apparently subtlety was outlawed in the kingdom of Ehb. Even his wife, Solana (Claire Forlani), calls him Farmer, which is less a nickname and more a cry for help. Naturally, this “Farmer” is not just a humble turnip enthusiast but a secret action hero with a mysterious past, because heaven forbid anyone in this movie just be what they say they are. When his son Zeph (Colin Ford) gets murdered by the low-rent orc knockoffs known as the Krug, and Solana is kidnapped, Farmer flips the switch into vengeance mode and sets off with his brother-in-law, Bastian (Will Sanderson), and Norick (Ron Perlman), another man with a past so mysterious that the movie barely bothers to explain it coherently.

“Is three enough to make a Fellowship?”

Meanwhile, the kingdom is under threat from Gallian (Ray Liotta), an evil Magus who spends most of his screen time delivering his lines like he’s trying to win a shouting contest no one else entered. He controls the Krug, who are somehow both mindless beasts and disciplined soldiers, depending entirely on what the scene needs to limp forward. King Konreid (Burt Reynolds) and his court scramble to respond, while Duke Fallow (Matthew Lillard) plots betrayal with all the subtlety of a man aggressively winking at the audience. There’s also Merick (John Rhys-Davies), a wizard who exists primarily to dump exposition like he’s being paid per paragraph, and to remind us of a better fantasy epic.

“I happen to have Peter Jackson on speed dial.”

Farmer and his merry band wander through forests, meet nymphs led by Elora (Kristanna Loken), and stumble from one generic fantasy set-piece to another. Along the way, Norick and Bastian get captured, Farmer gets hanged and then just sort of… unhanged, and Merick reveals that Farmer is actually Camden Konreid, long-lost prince and heir to the throne. This revelation lands with all the emotional impact of someone announcing the weather, mostly because the movie forgot to make us care about any of these people.

“Whatever, just point me to the next plot point.”

The final act is a chaotic stew of battles, betrayals, and last-minute heroics. Norick dies, because of course he does. Solana gets rescued after briefly becoming a magical plot device, and Gallian is defeated in a sword fight that feels less like a climax and more like an obligation. Farmer, now Camden, becomes king, the Krug go back to being dumb animals, and the kingdom is saved. You sit there, staring at the screen, wondering how something so loud and busy can feel so completely empty.

“I will not be returning for the sequels.”

Stray Observations:

  • Farmer has the fighting skills of Aragon and Captain America combined, but we are never given any explanation as to how he got those skills. The big revelation about his past does not explain this at all.
  • Burt Reynolds is starting to look like Richard Lynch due to one too many plastic surgeries.
  • Ray Liotta as the evil sorcerer Gallian is so badly miscast that I longed for Jeremy Irons hamming it up in Dungeons and Dragons during all his scenes.
  • All the battles are fought in the woods when that would be tactically the dumbest thing an army could do.
  • I love John Rhys-Davies, but he is no Gandalf. He should have stuck to playing dwarves.
  • Leelee Sobieski is no Arwen. She was so bad, I kept wishing Nicholas Cage would show up in a bear suit to punch her in the face.
  • Farmer never wears anything but his stupid shirt, even when he decides to hook up with the army and then becomes king. Did no one have a spare chain mail shirt he could borrow?
  • Jason Statham cannot deliver rousing speeches. In fact, I doubt he could inspire a group of Cub Scouts.
  • Having your showdown between the hero (Farmer in full Aragon mode) against the villain (Gallian in full Saruman mode) makes little to no sense, as Gallian had been clearly established to be a very powerful wizard, so having him up against a non-magic user should have this fight lasting about ten seconds.

Is this a magic duel or a sword duel? I’m confused.

Now, getting into the meat of this glorious disaster. The film isn’t as technically bad as some of Boll’s previous outings, which isn’t saying much. House of the Dead was a completely bonkers mess, but that is actually a strike against this movie, because at least that one had the decency to be entertaining in its insanity. Here, Boll tries to make an epic with the scope of Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy, but with a tenth of the budget and even less talent, and he fails on about every level. The scenes that are direct rip-offs from Jackson’s films just make it worse, like watching someone trace a masterpiece and then proudly hang it on the fridge.

Beware of discount orcs!

At two hours, it already feels longer than The Lord of the Rings trilogy combined, mostly because you care about absolutely no one. The characters are paper-thin, the dialogue clunks along like it’s being dragged uphill, and the pacing somehow manages to crawl and sprint at the same time. Then you discover there’s a director’s cut that balloons to an ungodly two hours and forty-two minutes, which feels less like a bonus and more like a threat. When the heroic conclusion finally limps across the finish line, the overwhelming reaction is a tired shrug and the faint realization that it absolutely could have been worse. It almost was.

Beware of Cirque du Soleil elves!

Then there’s the cast, which looks impressive on paper and baffling in execution. Jason Statham spends most of the film looking like he’s waiting for someone to yell “cut” so he can go do a better movie. Burt Reynolds seems half-asleep, Ray Liotta chews scenery like it owes him money, and Matthew Lillard dials everything up to eleven for reasons known only to him. The only bright spot is Ron Perlman, who, as always, commits fully, delivering a performance that belongs in a much better film. It’s almost touching, like watching someone show up overdressed to a costume party.

“I’m not just good, I’m bloody Ron Perlman!”

Boll’s track record with video game adaptations is already the stuff of legend, and not the kind anyone brags about at dinner. He has an uncanny ability to take source material with built-in audiences and reshape it into something that satisfies absolutely no one, which is almost impressive in a grim, scientific way. His direction here is flat, his sense of pacing barely qualifies as a pulse, and his understanding of what makes fantasy compelling seems limited to “people in armour hitting each other.” It’s less outright incompetence and more a stubborn refusal to evolve, all wrapped up in a glossy layer of bargain-bin early 2000s CGI that somehow makes everything look cheaper than it already is.

“Assemble the CGI army!”

In conclusion, In the Name of the King is a film that aspires to greatness and lands somewhere in the general vicinity of mediocrity’s basement. It’s not the worst sword-and-sorcery film ever made, but that faint praise feels almost insulting considering the resources thrown at it. If the money had been spent on a good script and handed to a director with actual vision, you might have had something halfway decent. Instead, what you get is a bloated, joyless fantasy that exists mostly as a cautionary tale about what happens when ambition and ability never bother to meet.