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How
can I get an oscar playing a $%£%^& elf?
TSR - creators of the roleplaying genre through its Dungeons
and Dragons game- have been through a really rocky patch in
the 1990s.
First they totally missed the CCG card game craze which led to
them being taken over by Wizards of The Coast, then Wizards
of The Coast was itself taken over by some other giant when
the CCG craze blew over to new kids on the block like Pokemon (wasn't
it Hasbro, the makers of Monopoly etc - Ed)
However, TSR are still hobbling on with their plans to make a Dungeons
and Dragons movie (a film that should hit the cinemas a good
few years before Tolkien's new Lord of the Rings movie).
The movie is now shot v-a-v its live action sequences, and is in
the can for the meaty FX add-ons being planned (or should that be
on the digital hard drive). These should be done about August, in
time for an October 2000 release.
The budget is less than a quarter of what most studios have been
recently spending on SFX driven blockbusters, so we hope the crew
can carry it off without too much visual poverty during the movie
experience.
Fantasy movies has never quite taken off in the same commercial
way as SF. Even Lucas's Willow was a financial pigmy compared to
an Indiana Jones or ET.
Most of them have suffered from pigmy budgets too. Just compare
Conan to Independence Day ... the former relied on Arnie to pull
it through.
Anyway, our Courtney Solomon (an ex-RPG fan himself, now the producer)
was the brave chappie who pitched the movie to TSR - notoriously
'artistic' about the use of its brand by its own writers and illustrators
(let alone third party companies).
This is Solomon's first time in the director's hot seat, having
served on over 20 films and TV movies in various functions.
His main challenge has been to keep the movie true to the D&D
universe so the fans don't come away cheated, while at the same
time making sure the hordes of non-RPG'ers don't walk away bemused
by the plot.
Rather unsurprisingly, the plot features a group of adventurers
on a quest together (including all the main character classes: thieves,
wizards, dwarves, elves, and rangers). Even the spells in the film
are all extracted from the magic section of the D&D rulebook.
Actors drafted for this major fantasy fest include Kristen 'Doctor
Dolittle' Wilson, Justin 'Lois and Clark Jimmy Olsen' Whalen, Jeremy
'The Mission' Irons, Richard 'Rocky Horror Show' O'Brien, and Tom
Baker - a big draw for the Doctor Who fans.
Tom 'luvvie' Baker plays the King of the Elfen race, an excellent
role for someone who may just be as mad as a proverbial brush, and
the level of chat in Doctor Who related newsgroups has been hotting
up in anticipation of their fave Doctor's new cinematic outing.
Will the D&D movie live up to its hype? Or will it suck? If
it's the former, it'll be breaking a most noble tradition set by
movies such as Wing Commander and Mario Brothers.
Hmmm. Time will tell.
Browse the latest Dungeons
and Dragons gear
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