IMDb रेटिंग
6.2/10
20 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
एक जादूगर, एक विच हंटर के साथ तेजी से पीछा करते हुए, 17 वीं से 20 वीं शताब्दी में, उड़ान भर कर जाता है.एक जादूगर, एक विच हंटर के साथ तेजी से पीछा करते हुए, 17 वीं से 20 वीं शताब्दी में, उड़ान भर कर जाता है.एक जादूगर, एक विच हंटर के साथ तेजी से पीछा करते हुए, 17 वीं से 20 वीं शताब्दी में, उड़ान भर कर जाता है.
- पुरस्कार
- 1 जीत और कुल 8 नामांकन
Anna Thomson
- Pastor's Wife
- (as Anna Levine)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
This movie actually is a pretty fun film with a lot more going for it than most people might think just looking at the cover. Sands is perfectly cast as the warlock, an evil-to-the-core witch who works for nothing less than the uncreation of the cosmos. Fighting him is an out-of-his-element witch-hunter who has chased him to the present (Grant) with a peculiar confidence. He knows his enemy and knows what he needs to do to prevent the warlock from completing the Grand Grimoire, but is lost in the present. Tagging along is a modern-day girl who is acceptably portrayed by Lori Singer caught between the warlock's unbelievable powers, her newfound friend from the past with an obsession, and her now blasted view of "how things work in the real world." Two things really make this film though. The first is that the explanations that are given actually don't bog the momentum down (and the filmmakers decide to leave some things unexplained or give the most cursory explanations to catch the audience up in the wild ride that Kassandra (Singer) has found herself in) and that although both the warlock and the hunter have powers, they are closly matched and totally obsessed, making for a very interesting conflict. There's also enough tongue in cheek to keep people interesting and to break occasional tension. Very watchable - go and try it on for size.
An interesting combination that is surprisingly entertaining.
The cinematography is good and the directing is excellent. The characters are interesting and the cast is very good.
A lot of effort has been put into the film, the director really made an effort to transfer this interesting story to the big screen. The film is entertaining and at times bizarre, but in a good way.
It possesses some strange charm despite its shortcomings which it compensates with entertaining characters and interesting plot. The concept is interesting and the director has achieved a good balance between horror and an entertaining film with a dose of subtle humor.
Julian Sands is interesting and sinister in the role of Warlock, and Richard E. Grant and Lori Singer are entertaining in the roles of Redferne and Cassandra.
A fun combination of several genres.
The cinematography is good and the directing is excellent. The characters are interesting and the cast is very good.
A lot of effort has been put into the film, the director really made an effort to transfer this interesting story to the big screen. The film is entertaining and at times bizarre, but in a good way.
It possesses some strange charm despite its shortcomings which it compensates with entertaining characters and interesting plot. The concept is interesting and the director has achieved a good balance between horror and an entertaining film with a dose of subtle humor.
Julian Sands is interesting and sinister in the role of Warlock, and Richard E. Grant and Lori Singer are entertaining in the roles of Redferne and Cassandra.
A fun combination of several genres.
A witch hunter (Richard. E. Grant) is chasing an evil warlock (Julian Sands) that got transported from the 17th century to 1980's Los Angeles. With help from a young woman (Lori Singer) who's received a hex from the warlock, they team up and rush against the clock to stop him from getting his hands on the pages of the Grand Grimoire (satanic bible) and in doing so he could undo all creation.
Director Steve Miner (Friday the 13th Part 2 & 3, House) achieves probably his best film in "Warlock". Some people might say his best is "Lake Placid", but I couldn't stand that annoying film myself. Anyhow, the fact is the plot of "Warlock" might be very formulaic and lack depth in the religious lingo, but he delivers a pleasurable supernatural chase thriller here. Involving some enterprising performances that go in hand-to-hand with the well-paced story, witty humour and energetic action scenes. All of these elements seem to gel perfectly for an incredibly fun ride that hardly has a dull moment to be had.
There are some nice effects are on show (warlock flying through the sky) and good makeup is provided. The violence is hardly graphic, but there's some mild graphic scenes and implied violence too. Miner adds in some nice added touches with extremely solid direction that keeps a solid pace and well-orchestrated camera-work that captures the rather exquisite scenery when the film takes a detour in the countryside. Not particularly suspenseful or uneasy viewing, but well organised action set pieces, some horrific sequences and humorous moments (ingenious ending) makes up for it. There are some well-organised scenes of excitement and thrills, especially the sequences involving a farmhouse and a terrific climax in the eerie graveyard. It's layered with a potent score by Jerry Goldsmith that builds on some rare tense scenes, but more on the rapid mood of the film.
What truly make the film standout are riveting performances even though they feel hammy. There is such an excellent blend of chemistry between the leads. With each of them throwing back and forth to each other smart and witty dialogue. Julian Sands central performance leaps out as a powerful warlock out to destroy mankind. He fit's the role perfectly with this deviously venomous presence about him. Richard. E. Grant is charming as the very determined warlock hunter Giles Redferne. When these two characters meet, the confrontations between them always spices up the film. Lori Singer is enjoyable as the unknowingly Kassandra who adds to the humour and zest of the film.
The film might be nothing out of the ordinary, but you can't deny the upbeat tempo of a thrilling adventure that leads you on a whirlwind trip from Los Angeles to Boston.
Director Steve Miner (Friday the 13th Part 2 & 3, House) achieves probably his best film in "Warlock". Some people might say his best is "Lake Placid", but I couldn't stand that annoying film myself. Anyhow, the fact is the plot of "Warlock" might be very formulaic and lack depth in the religious lingo, but he delivers a pleasurable supernatural chase thriller here. Involving some enterprising performances that go in hand-to-hand with the well-paced story, witty humour and energetic action scenes. All of these elements seem to gel perfectly for an incredibly fun ride that hardly has a dull moment to be had.
There are some nice effects are on show (warlock flying through the sky) and good makeup is provided. The violence is hardly graphic, but there's some mild graphic scenes and implied violence too. Miner adds in some nice added touches with extremely solid direction that keeps a solid pace and well-orchestrated camera-work that captures the rather exquisite scenery when the film takes a detour in the countryside. Not particularly suspenseful or uneasy viewing, but well organised action set pieces, some horrific sequences and humorous moments (ingenious ending) makes up for it. There are some well-organised scenes of excitement and thrills, especially the sequences involving a farmhouse and a terrific climax in the eerie graveyard. It's layered with a potent score by Jerry Goldsmith that builds on some rare tense scenes, but more on the rapid mood of the film.
What truly make the film standout are riveting performances even though they feel hammy. There is such an excellent blend of chemistry between the leads. With each of them throwing back and forth to each other smart and witty dialogue. Julian Sands central performance leaps out as a powerful warlock out to destroy mankind. He fit's the role perfectly with this deviously venomous presence about him. Richard. E. Grant is charming as the very determined warlock hunter Giles Redferne. When these two characters meet, the confrontations between them always spices up the film. Lori Singer is enjoyable as the unknowingly Kassandra who adds to the humour and zest of the film.
The film might be nothing out of the ordinary, but you can't deny the upbeat tempo of a thrilling adventure that leads you on a whirlwind trip from Los Angeles to Boston.
This is to me one of the most overlooked 80's horror films yet. Its also one of the best. The characters are well developed, and there's even an actual plot! The cast was perfect as well as the special effects which arn't cheesey at all. You don't see the typical teen girls getting butchered along with their boyfriends. You don't see undeveloped unlikeble characters. What you do see is a really good movie, that is totally underrated. Underrated is the key word to describe this movie, Lori Singer is a brilliant actress who is far too overlooked as well as Julian Sands. Its a "must see" movie for fans of quality horror movies.
Julian Sands disappeared while hiking early this year. His body was found a few months later. In his memory, I decided to watch this horror flick in which he starred. Steve Miner's "Warlock" casts Sands as a malevolent sorcerer in colonial New England who jumps to 1980s LA in search of a book to undo creation.
The movie isn't particularly scary - kind of silly, in fact - but it's fun to see the awkwardness of the pursuing clergyman (Richard E. Grant) in the '80s as he considers almost everything witchcraft. Lori Singer plays the Angeleno gal who has to explain modernity to the clergyman.
Basically, the movie makes no pretense about what it is. Some of the CGI looks archaic by today's standards, but it remains a fun movie. Julian Sands's icy blond hair makes him look almost like a Bond villain. Watch for a brief appearance by Mary Woronov (of "Eating Raoul" fame) as a medium.
Steve Miner also directed "Friday the 13th Part 2", "Halloween H20" and "Lake Placid", while screenwriter David Twohy went on to direct the Riddick series.
The movie isn't particularly scary - kind of silly, in fact - but it's fun to see the awkwardness of the pursuing clergyman (Richard E. Grant) in the '80s as he considers almost everything witchcraft. Lori Singer plays the Angeleno gal who has to explain modernity to the clergyman.
Basically, the movie makes no pretense about what it is. Some of the CGI looks archaic by today's standards, but it remains a fun movie. Julian Sands's icy blond hair makes him look almost like a Bond villain. Watch for a brief appearance by Mary Woronov (of "Eating Raoul" fame) as a medium.
Steve Miner also directed "Friday the 13th Part 2", "Halloween H20" and "Lake Placid", while screenwriter David Twohy went on to direct the Riddick series.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe scene where the "witch" flies out of the cargo compartment on the airplane took several takes. The actor couldn't easily open the cargo door on the B707, so actual airline employees were used.
- गूफ़Redfern asks if the farmer is Amish, and the farmer replies Mennonite. He wouldn't have known about either in Boston in 1691.
- भाव
Giles Redferne: [admonishing Kassandra after stopping her crashing the car] Let your attention lie before you, not beside you.
Kassandra: Check this! Some guy from the seventeenth century telling ME how to drive. How quick they learn!
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Killer Kids: Occult Killers (2011)
- साउंडट्रैकCORAZONITA
Performed by Los Almejas
Words and music by Vince Melamed and Josh Leo
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Djinn
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $70,00,000(अनुमानित)
- US और कनाडा में सकल
- $90,94,451
- US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
- $7,80,360
- 13 जन॰ 1991
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $90,94,451
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 43 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.33 : 1(original aspect ratio/open matte)
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