IMDb RATING
4.2/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
A fearsome swordsman, Kain, crosses the barren wastelands and comes upon a town where two arch enemies fight incessantly for control of the town's only well.A fearsome swordsman, Kain, crosses the barren wastelands and comes upon a town where two arch enemies fight incessantly for control of the town's only well.A fearsome swordsman, Kain, crosses the barren wastelands and comes upon a town where two arch enemies fight incessantly for control of the town's only well.
María Socas
- Naja the Sorceress
- (as Maria Socas)
Anthony De Longis
- Kief, Zeg's Captain
- (as Anthony DeLongis)
Guillermo Marín
- Bal Caz
- (as William Marin)
Armando Capo
- Burgo the Slaver
- (as Arthur Clark)
Marcos Woinsky
- Burgo's Captain
- (as Mark Welles)
Cecilia Narova
- Exotic Dancer
- (as Cecilia North)
José Casanova
- Zeg's Guard
- (as Joe Cass)
Arturo Noal
- Zeg's Guard
- (as Arthur Neal)
Miguel Zavaleta
- Zeg's Guard
- (as Michael Zane)
Hernán Gené
- Zeg's Guard
- (as Herman Gere)
Featured reviews
This movie has all the classic elements of a standard fantasy movie - a few good ideas and loads of bad execution. Notable for the appearance of David Carradine who plays just about the most unsympathetic character I've seen him play. Check out the exotic dancer scene, good for a few laughs. The extras were obviously new to acting, since they could hardly have done a worse job. Nevertheless, the script has a decent plot to it.
Warrior and the Sorceress is a fantasy version of the classic Japanese film Yojimbo, which was later remade as A Fistful Of Dollars. Basically, a stranger with no name (David Carradine) comes into town amongst rival factions fighting over a well, the only source of water. He plays both sides of the fence, yada yada yada....you've all seen it a zillion times.
What makes this different, besides the setting, is the fantasy/medieval weirdness factor, including the sorceress (Maria Socas, looking fetching as she does the entire film sans a top), a telepathic (and incredibly phony) monitor lizard, and, to top it all off, a dance by a lady with four (count 'em, four!) honkers. And, I have to admit, her prosthetics seemed to me incredibly well done. Maybe that's just me.
The swordplay was quite good, and the acting (though not spectacular), was entirely adequate. It seems like everyone involved had a great time, and so did I.
For your rental (or purchase) dollar, you could do a whole lot worse...
What makes this different, besides the setting, is the fantasy/medieval weirdness factor, including the sorceress (Maria Socas, looking fetching as she does the entire film sans a top), a telepathic (and incredibly phony) monitor lizard, and, to top it all off, a dance by a lady with four (count 'em, four!) honkers. And, I have to admit, her prosthetics seemed to me incredibly well done. Maybe that's just me.
The swordplay was quite good, and the acting (though not spectacular), was entirely adequate. It seems like everyone involved had a great time, and so did I.
For your rental (or purchase) dollar, you could do a whole lot worse...
So, it's not the latest Merchant-Ivory production. Let's face it, those blokes could certainly learn a thing or two from the Roger Corman school of filmmaking.
"THE WARRIOR AND THE SORCERESS" has a lot going for it, and bears the distinction of being the only film in motion picture history to ever combine all of the following elements* into a neat 77 minute package AND still manage to pack the kids' lunches, run for Governor of Illinois and pick up last week's dry cleaning all at the same time. What a trooper!
*"The following elements"... -- David Carradine -- Tons of naked women -- Sword fights (inept and otherwise) -- Maria Socas running around topless eighty percent of the time -- Cues from James Horner's "HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP" score -- Tons of breasts... the friendly kind -- A fat man and his angry lizard (that astounds like no other animatronic, yet immobile angry lizard ever could!) -- A chick with four... count 'em... four tits (beat that Verhoeven!) -- And, of course... David Carradine.
What more could you ask for? A blender? This film deserves it's own category. Peplum Film Noir.
If you want to send love this Christmas, give 'em "THE WARRIOR AND THE SORCERESS". They'll devour it in 77 minutes flat... and, love you for it, if time permits.
"THE WARRIOR AND THE SORCERESS" has a lot going for it, and bears the distinction of being the only film in motion picture history to ever combine all of the following elements* into a neat 77 minute package AND still manage to pack the kids' lunches, run for Governor of Illinois and pick up last week's dry cleaning all at the same time. What a trooper!
*"The following elements"... -- David Carradine -- Tons of naked women -- Sword fights (inept and otherwise) -- Maria Socas running around topless eighty percent of the time -- Cues from James Horner's "HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP" score -- Tons of breasts... the friendly kind -- A fat man and his angry lizard (that astounds like no other animatronic, yet immobile angry lizard ever could!) -- A chick with four... count 'em... four tits (beat that Verhoeven!) -- And, of course... David Carradine.
What more could you ask for? A blender? This film deserves it's own category. Peplum Film Noir.
If you want to send love this Christmas, give 'em "THE WARRIOR AND THE SORCERESS". They'll devour it in 77 minutes flat... and, love you for it, if time permits.
Its the 80's and Sword and Sorcery without CGI is the game. David Carradine wanders into town with a massive sword and runs through the script of Yojimbo, then he runs through a series of henchman in some poorly executed fight scenes.
There is a town and a well that provides all the water. Two hopeless chieftains battle for control until Carradine plays both sides.
Budget must have been very tight, most of the savings made in the Women's clothing budgets - nudity a standard.
The film is just lacking in almost all areas, but at least it gets on with it in a breezy 80 minutes and therefore carries enough dumb fun to completely outweigh its welcome.
There is a town and a well that provides all the water. Two hopeless chieftains battle for control until Carradine plays both sides.
Budget must have been very tight, most of the savings made in the Women's clothing budgets - nudity a standard.
The film is just lacking in almost all areas, but at least it gets on with it in a breezy 80 minutes and therefore carries enough dumb fun to completely outweigh its welcome.
Well, first off you can't expect much from the man who produced the Deathstalker Series.. =) But this film I think is the better of the whole sword and sorcery films he's released.
The story is set in a slave town where two clans are at swords with each other to control the well and the people in this desert wasteland. The film circles the adventures of the Dark One(according to the box and creds, Carridine's character's name is Kain, which I don't want to call him. Its just stupid to name him the same thing from Kung Fu. He's only called the Dark One in the movie), who has stumbled into this town, and begins selling his skills as a swordsman to the higher pay.
The film is pretty decent, but don't expect Conan the Barbarian, or Beastmaster. The only two questions I have are:
Why doesn't Naja(Maria Socas) EVER put on a bra or a shirt? The whole entire film she is topless. At first I thought it was because she was a slave wench to one of the clans, but even when she was free, she still didn't put anything on.
If the Sword of Ura can cut through an anvil, why doesn't it chop through everyone's swords like a hot knife through butter?
Eh, oh well. Watch the film if you have nothing better to do.
The story is set in a slave town where two clans are at swords with each other to control the well and the people in this desert wasteland. The film circles the adventures of the Dark One(according to the box and creds, Carridine's character's name is Kain, which I don't want to call him. Its just stupid to name him the same thing from Kung Fu. He's only called the Dark One in the movie), who has stumbled into this town, and begins selling his skills as a swordsman to the higher pay.
The film is pretty decent, but don't expect Conan the Barbarian, or Beastmaster. The only two questions I have are:
Why doesn't Naja(Maria Socas) EVER put on a bra or a shirt? The whole entire film she is topless. At first I thought it was because she was a slave wench to one of the clans, but even when she was free, she still didn't put anything on.
If the Sword of Ura can cut through an anvil, why doesn't it chop through everyone's swords like a hot knife through butter?
Eh, oh well. Watch the film if you have nothing better to do.
Did you know
- TriviaUnlike much bigger-budget movies such as Total Recall (1990) or Charlie, les filles lui disent merci (2007) this movie features a woman with anatomically correct multiple breasts, in this case four.
This does happen occasionally due to a mutation, but only along the Mammalian Lines - two arcs along the torso from the genitals to the forelegs (armpits in humans), on which the teats of all mammals occur. Any number of teats may form on any species, but the typical amount is twice the usual litter size (which is of course one in humans), and no breasts would ever form along a horizontal line.
- GoofsThe planet Ur has two suns in the sky, yet there are no double shadows.
Two suns are so far away that they don't present two light sources. It's not like two spotlights.
- Alternate versionsAccording to the "Technical specs" link for this movie, there are at least two different versions of this film, one clocking in at 1 hr 21 min (81 min), and a second at 1 hr 14 min (74 min). The second was only released in the United Kingdom and has been edited down to remove some scenes of violence.
- ConnectionsEdited from Deathstalker (1983)
- How long is The Warrior and the Sorceress?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El guerrero y la hechicera
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,886,225
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $574,210
- Sep 9, 1984
- Gross worldwide
- $2,886,225
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