Print-Screen: Not Quite Boll-ed Over
A review of "In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale"
by Troy S. Goodfellow, 3/27/2008 12:00 AM
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Gamers have come to expect the worst from Uwe Boll. The man who has made a career out of turning decent videogames into bad movies has historically been able to blame the resulting travesties on B-list actors or low budgets. But with action-hero-of-the-moment Jason Statham and a budget estimated at $70 million, "In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale" had a remote chance of being a light pleasure in a mostly barren January.
That chance was more remote than anyone could have realized. Nothing in the movie works. The monster costumes are throwbacks to rubber suits of yore. Ray Liotta gives the least convincing evil wizard performance since Jeremy Irons in "Dungeons and Dragons," but he's got a nice leather jacket. Statham mumbles and growls his way through the picture. Only Lord of the Rings veteran John Rhys-Davies fills his role with any of the gravitas that the plot's life-or-death stakes demand.
In fact, so much is lifted from Lord of the Rings that if you didn't go in knowing that the Dungeon Siege in the subtitle referred to a game, you might imagine that it was one of Tolkien's lesser works, a teenage dry run for his epic trilogy. An evil sorcerer arms a force of orc-like beings to help a ludicrously idiotic royal nephew take the throne. One man sets out to rescue his wife from these "krug" and ends up rescuing a kingdom. There is a dark forge scene, a secret royal lineage, a girl who wants to be a soldier, and forest dwelling elves who are forced to confront the growing evil that surrounds their lands.
To be fair, much of this material is by now standard fantasy fare, present in the game that inspired the movie and in many more besides, and the screenwriters were clever enough to throw in ninjas. I've always believed that medieval fantasy needed more ninjas.
"In the Name of the King" is as good a reminder as any that Boll's major problem is not that he takes inspiration from uninspiring sources, but that he really has no idea what he is doing. The battle scenes are confused brawls between random extras, poorly edited and repetitively scored; there's a music sting when one of the krug overturns a table with vegetables on it. The wire choreography seems out of place most of the time and the dialogue is portentous even when there is little to portend.
It's hard to single out any one scene for special ridicule. There's a duel of Mordekainen's Swords at the end. There's the evil-mage-as-ob-gyn scene. Burt Reynolds, one of the kings in the title, drags out a death worse than Hamlet. The good mage tells the general that a "small force" has a better chance of success than a large one. The evil mage trashes his own library, and the hero's words are barely audible beneath the screeching strings of the soundtrack. As bad you think the movie is, it keeps getting worse.
But even if "In the Name of the King" isn't Boll's worst movie (which it could be) it is easily his greatest failure. With a release twice as wide as "Bloodrayne," it barley made twice the box office with more than twice the budget. It was widely promoted with a decent trailer, and the international success of "The Golden Compass" and "Beowulf" held out hope that the world's appetite for fantasy had room for dessert. That didn't come to pass -- "In the Name of the King" was as big a flop outside America as it was in. It opened domestically on January 11 and had almost entirely vanished from theaters within two
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