Wishmaster : Au-delà des portes de l'enfer
Original title: Wishmaster 3: Beyond the Gates of Hell
IMDb RATING
3.5/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
The evil Djinn is back at it again, this time wreaking havoc on the students of Illinois' Baxter University.The evil Djinn is back at it again, this time wreaking havoc on the students of Illinois' Baxter University.The evil Djinn is back at it again, this time wreaking havoc on the students of Illinois' Baxter University.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Jenny Pudavick
- Jose Rodriguez
- (as Jennifer Pudavick)
Clayton T. Stewart
- College Student
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I first saw this on cable tv in the early 2K.
Revisited it recently on a dvd which I own.
For the third time our unlucky genie/demon gets a chance to come out of the stone but this time there ain't no collection of 1000 souls.
In this he does a "face off". He peels the facial skin of a professor with his bare nails to take over his identity. The conclusion in this one is very lousy, the awaker (person who released the demon) wishes for an angel to protect her. The angel gets many chances to impale the demon with his magical sword but misses so that the awaker can finish the job.
The film has terrible music. The music during the final chase is that of some party music. A girl falls from a tall building n ther is no bleeding. For the first time ther is brief nudity. No good kills except for the rats one.
The film has terrible music. The music during the final chase is that of some party music. A girl falls from a tall building n ther is no bleeding. For the first time ther is brief nudity. No good kills except for the rats one.
I thought WISHMASTER was really, really good...especially since Andrew Divoff did such an amazing job...WISHMASTER 2 wasn't much but DIVOFF still made it very entertaining. I can't tell you how awful Wishmaster 3 is...It's not Divoff and the new Wishmaster isn't scary or even intimidating. The story sucks...Watch the first one again...it's not even worth the rental price.
Once again The Wishmaster returns but this time Andrew Divoff does not . Instead he is replace by John Novak who is just terrible in the role . He comes across as a fat idiot in make up . The Djin's human form is played by Jason Connery who isn't bad but he lacks the charm and wickedness of Andrew Divoff.
The Special effects are a notch better than those found in part 2 but they are nowhere near as good as those of the first movie .
Another problem with this film is the writting . The dialogue is just terrible .
All things considered this is a rather poor sequel . Not recommended !
The Special effects are a notch better than those found in part 2 but they are nowhere near as good as those of the first movie .
Another problem with this film is the writting . The dialogue is just terrible .
All things considered this is a rather poor sequel . Not recommended !
Diana Collins (A.J.Cook Final Destination 2') unwittingly awakes the malicious Djinn (John Novak) who quickly assumes the identity of college professor Joel Barash (Jason Connery). The Djinn then enters a cat and mouse game with Diana in a bid to persuade her to make three wishes and thus condemning the world to an eternity of suffering.
This second sequel is the first movie in the series not to feature Andrew Divoff in the role of the Djinn. Instead, two people play the role, Connery plays the Djinn in human form and Novak assumes the character of the Djinn in demon form. Connery, to his credit, was not as bad a choice as I had first suspected. He managed to portray the Djinn with almost the right air of malevolence. However, Connery's near-powerful performance was let down by the performances of the rest of the cast. Even A.J. Cook, who put in a fairly good performance two years later in Final Destination 2', really failed to impress as she came off as dry, unenthusiastic and generally monotonous.
The movie itself started off reasonably well enough but eventually degenerated into a tedious and overly dragging example of bad horror filmmaking. The plot became very predictable and the screenplay just did not flow well and left the film with continuous moments of pointless, and forced, dialogue. On top of this the script seemed to show little tangency with the previous instalments and, as with Wishmaster 2', the `rules' of how the Djinn can interact with humans was changed. Also added were some unnecessary and (in many cases) ludicrous plot twists that made Wishmaster 3' all that more difficult to watch. There was however some impressive (and plentiful) gore effects, though these were overshadowed by the overuse of cheap looking and unnecessary CGI. Chris Angel's direction was also of a very low standard as it showed little inspiration or creativity. In fact, the scenes stolen from the previous two instalments were robbed of any darkness that was evident in the other movies.
Overall this is a very poor movie and only just on the same level as the previous instalment. Up to now I have not been a fan of the Wishmaster' franchise, and this movie has done nothing to change my mind. Fans of the original might enjoy this more than I did, though many may not be very accepting of the new Djinn. This movie is not one I would recommend and probably only worth watching if nothing else is on TV. Uninspired, poorly directed and generally dull. My rating for Wishmaster 3: Devil Stone' 3.5/10.
This second sequel is the first movie in the series not to feature Andrew Divoff in the role of the Djinn. Instead, two people play the role, Connery plays the Djinn in human form and Novak assumes the character of the Djinn in demon form. Connery, to his credit, was not as bad a choice as I had first suspected. He managed to portray the Djinn with almost the right air of malevolence. However, Connery's near-powerful performance was let down by the performances of the rest of the cast. Even A.J. Cook, who put in a fairly good performance two years later in Final Destination 2', really failed to impress as she came off as dry, unenthusiastic and generally monotonous.
The movie itself started off reasonably well enough but eventually degenerated into a tedious and overly dragging example of bad horror filmmaking. The plot became very predictable and the screenplay just did not flow well and left the film with continuous moments of pointless, and forced, dialogue. On top of this the script seemed to show little tangency with the previous instalments and, as with Wishmaster 2', the `rules' of how the Djinn can interact with humans was changed. Also added were some unnecessary and (in many cases) ludicrous plot twists that made Wishmaster 3' all that more difficult to watch. There was however some impressive (and plentiful) gore effects, though these were overshadowed by the overuse of cheap looking and unnecessary CGI. Chris Angel's direction was also of a very low standard as it showed little inspiration or creativity. In fact, the scenes stolen from the previous two instalments were robbed of any darkness that was evident in the other movies.
Overall this is a very poor movie and only just on the same level as the previous instalment. Up to now I have not been a fan of the Wishmaster' franchise, and this movie has done nothing to change my mind. Fans of the original might enjoy this more than I did, though many may not be very accepting of the new Djinn. This movie is not one I would recommend and probably only worth watching if nothing else is on TV. Uninspired, poorly directed and generally dull. My rating for Wishmaster 3: Devil Stone' 3.5/10.
I'm going to be frank. When I first saw Wishmaster back in 1997, I was greatly impressed. Here was a brave little film that: a) Stayed away from the teen horror genre (hiring hip teens to be butchered left and right) and hired unknowns. b) Was an homage to the splatterfests that haunted the screens from the late 70s to the early 90s (including the Freddy, Jason, and Pinhead films) c) Had some interesting cameos by some of the biggest horror stars, including Robert Englund (Freddy Krueger), Kane Hodder (Jason Voorhees), and Tony Todd (Candyman). All you needed was Doug Bradley (Pinhead) and Gunnar Hansen (Leatherface) and you would have a full house! d) Introduced us to a frightening screen villain that joined the ranks of the classics: the Djinn.
What made the Djinn so eerie was his cruel wish-making and, of course, the voice and presence of Andrew Divoff.
When I first heard that they made Wishmaster 3 and Wishmaster 4 together and with a new actor as the Djinn, I was a bit disappointed. How could they replace the best actor to play the Djinn? It's like replacing Doug Bradley and Robert Englund and having Pinhead and Freddy played by Ewan McGregor and Seann William Scott. And when I finally saw Wishmaster 3, my worst fear had come true. I thought that Wishmaster 2 was pretty bad enough, especially with the Djinn design change, but when I saw this one, I was so insulted by it, I started thinking that Wishmaster 2 was a masterpiece.
I had a few main problems with the film.
A) The lame wishes. If the wish was grotesque, it was ridiculous. The exploding heart, grotesque. The professor being ravaged by the demon women, ridiculous.
B) The acting. The actors are talented people, but they acted like they didn't even WANT to be in the movie. A.J. Cook (talented, but bad material), Tobias Mehler (good actor, bad projects (especially that Godforsaken Carrie remake!!!), and Jason Connery (who doesn't seem to have as great an acting capability as his father) just never seem to be believable.
C) The Djinn himself. With Andrew Divoff, even in the most ridiculous scenes imaginable, he always found a way to make the Djinn dark and scary. With John Novak filling his shoes, he's degenerated the Djinn into a second-class jokester (think of Freddy in the later sequels).
D) St. Michael being the Djinn's nemesis? Does this even need to be talked about?
If you want to rent a good horror film, rent either Jeepers Creepers, the original Wishmaster, or Jason X (not 100% horror, but it's much more entertaining), or go to the theaters and see The Ring, Final Destination 2, or Darkness Falls. Just avoid Wishmaster 3: The Sword of Justice (or Beyond the Gates of Hell, whetever the Hell they decide to call it this week) like the plague!
What made the Djinn so eerie was his cruel wish-making and, of course, the voice and presence of Andrew Divoff.
When I first heard that they made Wishmaster 3 and Wishmaster 4 together and with a new actor as the Djinn, I was a bit disappointed. How could they replace the best actor to play the Djinn? It's like replacing Doug Bradley and Robert Englund and having Pinhead and Freddy played by Ewan McGregor and Seann William Scott. And when I finally saw Wishmaster 3, my worst fear had come true. I thought that Wishmaster 2 was pretty bad enough, especially with the Djinn design change, but when I saw this one, I was so insulted by it, I started thinking that Wishmaster 2 was a masterpiece.
I had a few main problems with the film.
A) The lame wishes. If the wish was grotesque, it was ridiculous. The exploding heart, grotesque. The professor being ravaged by the demon women, ridiculous.
B) The acting. The actors are talented people, but they acted like they didn't even WANT to be in the movie. A.J. Cook (talented, but bad material), Tobias Mehler (good actor, bad projects (especially that Godforsaken Carrie remake!!!), and Jason Connery (who doesn't seem to have as great an acting capability as his father) just never seem to be believable.
C) The Djinn himself. With Andrew Divoff, even in the most ridiculous scenes imaginable, he always found a way to make the Djinn dark and scary. With John Novak filling his shoes, he's degenerated the Djinn into a second-class jokester (think of Freddy in the later sequels).
D) St. Michael being the Djinn's nemesis? Does this even need to be talked about?
If you want to rent a good horror film, rent either Jeepers Creepers, the original Wishmaster, or Jason X (not 100% horror, but it's much more entertaining), or go to the theaters and see The Ring, Final Destination 2, or Darkness Falls. Just avoid Wishmaster 3: The Sword of Justice (or Beyond the Gates of Hell, whetever the Hell they decide to call it this week) like the plague!
Did you know
- TriviaAndrew Divoff was set to reprise his role as The Djinn in Wishmaster 3 and in 1999, he had even written a script for a third entry entitled Wishmaster: The Third Millennium, that would have revolved around the panic surrounding Y2K at the time. Divoff's script would have opened with an American warship getting struck by a missile in Asia, while a meeting at the UN is interrupted by creatures coming to life and tearing apart the crowd. According to an interview with Divoff, a lot of thought was put into his script. But when he presented his script to the producers, they turned it down, feeling it was too ambitious and expensive to make so they went with Alex Wright's script instead. Divoff read it, hated it and left.
- Goofs(at around 38 mins) When the professor writes "Djinn" on the blackboard, the line he draws underneath is nowhere near the cursive writing on the board. After the walks around the room and goes back to the board, the word "Djinn" is different with the line underneath cutting into the cursive writing.
- Quotes
Professor Joel Barash: [sees the Djinn for the first time] Oh, Jesus!
The Djinn: Not even close!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Wishmaster 4 (2002)
- SoundtracksStarchild
Written by Mountain Mama
Performed by Mountain Mama
Published by Mountain Mama
Courtesy of Mountain Mama
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Wishmaster 3: Sword of Justice
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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