El señor de las bestias II
Título original: Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
4.2/10
3.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Dar es un guerrero que puede hablar con las bestias. Debe viajar a la Tierra para evitar que su malvado hermano robe una bomba atómica y convierta su tierra natal en - bueno, en un desierto.Dar es un guerrero que puede hablar con las bestias. Debe viajar a la Tierra para evitar que su malvado hermano robe una bomba atómica y convierta su tierra natal en - bueno, en un desierto.Dar es un guerrero que puede hablar con las bestias. Debe viajar a la Tierra para evitar que su malvado hermano robe una bomba atómica y convierta su tierra natal en - bueno, en un desierto.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Lawrence Dobkin
- Adm. Binns
- (as Larry Dobkin)
Steve Donmyer
- Police Officer
- (as Steve Donmeyer)
Richard L. Duran
- Guard #1
- (as Richard Duran)
James Patten Eagle
- Soldier
- (as Jim Eagle)
Opiniones destacadas
This time, it gets more interesting, but in some scenes too violent or out of control. Once again, now grown up Dar still has his pets and has to kill his brother after trying to discover what the real world looks like. Dar also discovers a new friend who lives in the city of Los Angeles where Dar's brother entered. It's not that bad until Dar's brother tries to destroy the world. In the beginning of the movie, some kids who are allowed to see this might be interested seeing a scene where the crow who was in the first movie nibbles some of the villian's face. They just don't show blood to prove it.
- Near the end, when Jackie and Dar approch the military base, they are on a Mercedes. A few shots later, it has become a BMW - At the begining, Jackie leave her car in the desert and go looking for gas, but she let her lights full on. That is not logical, especially singe at the very end we see that her car is still having power. - At the end, just before Dar returns in his world, Jackie's car is facing the wall. After Dar leaves, the car is in the other side.
During the closing credits (at least in the version that hit theatres), the Beastmaster can be seen running into the sunset. This sunset is actually a painted backdrop, and after a while, you can clearly discern that the guy is actually running in place for almost two minutes as the credits roll! A perfect end to a perfect movie!
...and all from the script. That's because this isn't a sequel, it's... more like an overgrown tongue-in-cheek fan-fic film that just happened to lure Singer in for the ride.
There's a lot to laugh at here, and unfortunately the "plot" is most of it. The players are fairly game and give some effort to their portrayals, but the writing just is never serious. Sadly, sometimes it pretends to be, but always returns to campiness before long. The dialog is very dated, too, as others have noted. Prepare to wince.
Taken for what it is -- cheesy, spoofish fun -- it actually isn't too bad, IMO. 4/10 for being brisk enough to carry me along to the end and make at least a few actually funny jokes. (My favorite was the line about the 2 guys she'd met in Mexico.) Kari's character annoyed me a lot at first but she got better later. Wings actually surprised me; I thought he made a serviceable villain (at least for this sort of camp), and I was expecting him not to fit well. Then again, I was expecting a real sequel....
One thing that needs pointing out is that Lyranna vanishes near the end of the film. The character just isn't seen any more, with no explanation of what happened to her. Oops.
So... If you don't allow it to be what it is and instead hold it up to the first movie, it stinks, as most reviewers have pointed out. If you're going to watch it, don't make that comparison. Just mostly forget the first movie, relax, and laugh at the intentional and unintentional humor here. Throw stuff at the TV when the cheese gets too thick. That way you should be able to enjoy it well enough.
There's a lot to laugh at here, and unfortunately the "plot" is most of it. The players are fairly game and give some effort to their portrayals, but the writing just is never serious. Sadly, sometimes it pretends to be, but always returns to campiness before long. The dialog is very dated, too, as others have noted. Prepare to wince.
Taken for what it is -- cheesy, spoofish fun -- it actually isn't too bad, IMO. 4/10 for being brisk enough to carry me along to the end and make at least a few actually funny jokes. (My favorite was the line about the 2 guys she'd met in Mexico.) Kari's character annoyed me a lot at first but she got better later. Wings actually surprised me; I thought he made a serviceable villain (at least for this sort of camp), and I was expecting him not to fit well. Then again, I was expecting a real sequel....
One thing that needs pointing out is that Lyranna vanishes near the end of the film. The character just isn't seen any more, with no explanation of what happened to her. Oops.
So... If you don't allow it to be what it is and instead hold it up to the first movie, it stinks, as most reviewers have pointed out. If you're going to watch it, don't make that comparison. Just mostly forget the first movie, relax, and laugh at the intentional and unintentional humor here. Throw stuff at the TV when the cheese gets too thick. That way you should be able to enjoy it well enough.
Like the first Beastmaster movie this is s so-so ripoff of Andre Norton's Beastmaster and Lord of Thunder, great science fiction about the last survivor of the Navajo nation who arrives on a new planet following earth's destruction during a war with the alien Xik, and learns to deal with his loss and love his new home Marc Singer's character in no way resembles Hosteen Storm and his animal companions are only close to the book. This is basically a cheapo that owes more to the Hercules movies of the 60's than to Sci-Fi.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJim Wynorski said in an interview that producer/director Sylvio Tabet tried to rip him off after Wynorski worked on the screenplay, but he ended up having his revenge a few years later: "Tabet lured me into the sequel with the prospect of writing and directing," he explained. "He'd made the first film, but then waited close to seven years to make the second. Along with my writing partner, R.J. Robertson, we wrote him a helluva good screenplay. Then at the last moment, he pulls the rug out from under me and says he's directing it himself. And then tops it off by threatening to take our writing credits off the picture. I took the bastard straight to court. He hired big-time attorneys to stall paying out the final script installments. I hated his guts. But I got the last laugh when Republic Pictures picked up the show. They wanted a picture totally clean of legal entanglements. So they came to me to make a deal and I held them up but good. Cleaned up. I still remember Tabet's pained face when I told him what it would take to get me to sign off. Even my own lawyer whined!"
- ErroresIn the first film, Dar's symbol is on his left hand. In this film, it's on his right hand, as seen in the battle against the creature, at about 19:20.
- ConexionesFeatured in The Making of 'Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time' (1991)
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- How long is Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 6,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 869,325
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 381,889
- 2 sep 1991
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 869,325
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 47min(107 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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