Reality is the playground of the unimaginative

Monday, 8 September 2008

DVD Of The Week: Attack Of The Gryphon (2007)

To cleanse my palate of the taste of the ridiculous BloodRayne, I picked up Attack Of The Gryphon in my on-going drive to search for Dungeons & Dragonsy-ness in movies.

Attack Of The Gryphon - or just Gryphon, as it is known in some quarters - is an American TV movie about two feuding kingdoms in the Land of Vallon that discover they need to work together to overcome a common foe.

Buffy's Amber Benson is Amelia of Lockland, a rugged, tom-boyish princess in the Joan of Arc mould, who has to team up with Prince Seth of Delphi (played by the younger brother of familiar TV face Anthony LaPaglia, Jonathan).

They are on quest to bring down the traitorous sorcerer Armand (Larry Drake, another familiar face - probably best remembered as L.A. Law's Benny Stulwicz), former counsellor to the King of Lockland, who has taken control of the kingdom's magical protector (a gryphon) and is using it to bring both warring kingdoms under his power.

If you can look past the feeble CGI used to give life to the gryphon, the bewildering array of accents and acting talents of the numerous performers and the obvious debt the film owes to such better known movies as Lord Of The Rings, it actually isn't that bad.

The script makes a half-decent effort at putting a fresh gloss on old cliches and while it doesn't always succeed, Benson's spunky Amelia and LaPaglia's rugged Seth are charismatic enough leads to carry the audience along - if they are willing to go on the journey.

While physically Benson is a surprising match for the role, initially it appears as though she is auditioning for a school play with her over-earnest line deliveries, but once out on the quest she settles better into the role.

Evil Armand, assisted by his two bizarrely-attired 'brides', uses more actual magic in this short film than Gandalf does in the entire Lord of The Rings trilogy and I suspect his 'phantasmal bitch-slap' spell is employed using some Fourth Edition 'at will' power, because he uses it alot to smack our heroes and their sidekicks around in the climactic confrontation.

There's some romance, magical duels, an animated statue (obviously an actor painted grey) and even an actual, genuine, underground dungeon crawl sequence - with traps and treasure - that made the whole enterprise shine in my eyes.

Sadly, the treasure at the end of this dungeon crawl, the blade of the legendary Draconian Pike, looks very plastic - almost like one of those cheap kid's swords you find in pound stores - which rather undermines the gravitas of the moment.

Attack Of The Gryphon is only 90 minutes long and while not the 'epic' the DVD packaging proclaims, it's still a lot better than a vast swathe of the fantasy fodder that came out in the wake of Peter Jackson's definitive take on Lord of The Rings.

For the D&D Gamesmaster looking for an inspirational 'pick-me-up', it's a worthy investment of an hour and a half of your time.
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3 serfs have something to say about this!:

  1. If you haven't seen it yet, check out the recent Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian movie. I saw it on a plane flight this past week, looks like it will be out on DVD in December. Awesome. Really a top notch fantasy war movie.

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  2. Sounds interesting, how does it stand up to "Sword of Xanten"?

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  3. Thanks for the tip, Wulfgar - I shall check it out in due course :-)

    I wouldn't rate this as highly as Sword of Xanten, but then that was a genuine three-hour epic. I'd say approach this with half the expectations of Xanten and you wouldn't be disappointed :-D

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