Dear Friends. We Updated Our Site Looks and Its Features.!

Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness (2012)

Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness backdrop
Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness
Movie Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness (2012)
Real Title Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness
Rating 4.2
Aired 2012-08-09
Duration 90 Min
Languages HINDI-ENGLISH
Quality WEB-DL
Subtitle NA
Sources IMDB | TMDB

Countries

Bulgaria, United States of America

Genres

Drama, Adventure, Fantasy, Hollywood Movies Hindi Dubbed, Hindi Dubbed Movies, Dual Audio, Hollywood Movies, English Movies

Companies

Zinc Entertainment Inc., Bomar OOD

Stars

Charlotte Hunter, Jack Derges, Anthony Howell, Eleanor Gecks, Habib Nasib Nader, Barry Aird

Directors

Gerry Lively

Writers

Brian Rudnick

Taglines

Taglines: The classic saga returns.

Tags

heroic mission, sword and sorcery

Description

A noble warrior must battle dragons and demons while upholding his moral code as he covertly joins a group of villains to rescue his kidnapped father from Shathrax, the Mind Flayer, who threatens to destroy the world.

Reviews

Reviews:

Author: Wuchak
***The darkest and most sinister D&D flick yet*** On a world where sorcery is real, a greenhorn knight (Jack Derges) teams-up with a dubious group to find his father who was kidnapped by mysterious evil powers. The group includes a witch (Eleanor Gecks), a sorcerer Vermin lord (Barry Aird), an assassin (Lex Daniels) and a goliath warrior (Habib Nasib Nader). "Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness" (2012), also known as “Dungeons & Dragons 3,” is the third of currently three D&D flicks, unconnected to the other two: “Dungeons & Dragons” (2000) and “Dungeons and Dragons: Wrath of the Dragon God” (2005). Evil wizard Damodar (Bruce Payne) was the only link between the first two movies, other than the fact that they both took place in Izmir. This third film abandons all links and takes place in Karkoth. The first movie was the only one released to theaters and therefore had a hefty budget, but it was hampered by camp and a goofy tone centered around Wayans’ humor. The second one, my favorite, was released to TV and therefore had a lower budget, but still pretty significant at $15 million. This third film is similar to the serious tone of the second, but is noticeably darker. The group the knight joins for his quest lacks the nobleness and camaraderie of the sojourners in “Wrath of the Dragon God.” They’re all either morally dubious or outright sinister. The D&D universe is similar to the world of Conan the Barbarian, but with a more medieval flair and a little more sorcery. If you like Conan, you’ll probably like this. The locations & sets are superlative while the magical F/X are TV-budget fare, but otherwise effective. The dragon especially looks good and the dragon-slaying episode is great. There’s also a very creative (and dark) zombie girl sequence. On the negative side, this is easily the least of the three flicks in the feminine department, although Eleanor Gecks is a’right, I guess. The film runs 1 hour, 30 minutes and was shot in Bulgaria. GRADE: B-

Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness in Multiple Formats