Dungeons & Dragons - New Line Platinum Series
(2000)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Jeremy Irons, Justin Whalin.
Director: Courtney Solomon
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• Two feature length audio commentaries
• Two original documentaries: "Let the Games Begin" - a profile
and history of adventure gaming and "The Making of Dungeons and
Dragons"
• 11 deleted scenes with optional director commentary
• Special effects deconstruction - 4 multi-angle scenes
• DVD-ROM: Dungeons and Dragons role playing game and fully
playable-game demo of Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn
• Widescreen anamorphic format
Editorial
Reviews
There is trouble in Izmer.
With the emperor dead from an assassin's poison, the 16-year-old princess
Savina (Thora Birch) inherits not just the throne but also the royal scepter,
which has the power to command gold dragons. With a youthful idealism, she
decides all people should be equal, from lowly commoners to the ruling-class,
magic-wielding mages. This doesn't sit well with the mages, so Archmage Profion
(Jeremy Irons) leads a revolt in the Council against Savina's rule, forcing her
to relinquish the royal scepter. In order to maintain her power, she decides
she needs the rod of Savrille, which can control red dragons. To retrieve it,
she hires two bumbling thieves, Ridley (Justin Whalin) and Snails (Marlon
Wayans), and an apprentice mage (Zoe McLellan). The true trouble in Izmer is
the fact that it's a poorly imagined world that cribs more from Star Wars
and Raiders of the Lost Ark than it does from the Dungeons & Dragons
role-playing game that shares its title. Director Courtney Solomon optioned the
rights to the game in 1991, when he was 21, and should have spent the years
since then drafting a coherent script. Mediocre special effects take precedence
over story, and the actors try to make up for that by hamming it up. Irons, in
particular, covers his embarrassment by chewing the scenery and spitting it
out. Often unintentionally funny, Dungeons & Dragons is that fun
kind of bad movie, whose cult status would be all but guaranteed if it weren't
for a slow second act mired in the boring bumbling of the awkward thieves.
Still, there are plenty of laughs to be had. --Andy Spletzer
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