An evil drow-elf is displaced by Hurricane Katrina. A sanitation worker lures friends into a Sphere of Annihilation. A failed supervillain starts a cable access show involving ninjas, puppet... Read allAn evil drow-elf is displaced by Hurricane Katrina. A sanitation worker lures friends into a Sphere of Annihilation. A failed supervillain starts a cable access show involving ninjas, puppets, and a cooking segment. These are the characters, real and imagined, of The Dungeon Mast... Read allAn evil drow-elf is displaced by Hurricane Katrina. A sanitation worker lures friends into a Sphere of Annihilation. A failed supervillain starts a cable access show involving ninjas, puppets, and a cooking segment. These are the characters, real and imagined, of The Dungeon Masters: Against the backdrop of crumbling middle-class America, two men and one woman devote ... Read all
- Director
- Stars
- Self
- (uncredited)
- Larper
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
I guess they wanted to make a film about weirdos and figured roleplayers were an easy target? And then they edited the film to make the weirdos look even more weird.
You learn practically nothing about what roleplaying is from this documentary, but you certainly pick up that these three people's hobby is considered weird by their significant others, family and friends.
I love Dungeons & Dragons, otherwise I wouldn't have played for this many years, obviously, but this movie was just a tad too much. It was all about hanging people out to dry. There were times when I was thinking that this is so staged and fake, because no one could seriously have that sad existences.
How about if the director had opted to show people who weren't socially challenged, overweight, nerdy and alienated from the 'normal' world around them? During my 26 years of gaming and having had multiple people in and out of the gaming groups, I can honestly say that the way these people were portrayed, I can only name one in my experience of gaming that would qualify to be part of the ensemble in this movie.
I don't believe that this documentary does justice to the role-playing game, or the people that play these games, one bit.
And as for the LARPing (Live Action Role-Playing), then I am at a loss here. I can't take that serious. Full-grown people dressing up in costumes and armor, brandishing latex weapons and throwing paper at one another to symbolize magic. What the... It is acceptable when children or young teens do it, but when people in their thirties with a house and family start doing it, you might as well just turn the key and admit to the ultimate defeat. LARPing is lame on an epic scale. And the way that it was portrayed in this movie, really didn't help to improve on that faltering image that it is.
What was good about the documentary was that you got to see the aspects of these people's obsession with role-playing and got to delve a little bit into their mindsets, who they were and what drove them on. But I have to say, again, that it was all painted out in a grotesque way to make role-playing gamers stand in a bad light.
At the end I was sort of disappointed by this movie, and it didn't really prove to have any entertainment value. If you want to be entertained by something from the role-playing milieu, then perhaps the 2002 movie "The Gamers" is a better choice.
My friends (also D&D nerds) and I watched this film and were entertained by, but it's paints a terrible picture of the people who play D&D.
If you want to see a great example of D&D, the a show on Youtube called "Critical Role." It films D&D played by a bunch of successful voice actors who happen to play, and I feel it paints a better portrait of the game.
Did you know
- TriviaOne portion of Elizabeth's segments shows that she is GMing and using a particular book as a GMs screen. The book is the Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting resource (FRCS). This indicates that she is running a D&D 3.5 Campaign set in Faerun.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 185: Religulous, The Wrestler and TIFF Wrap-Up (2008)
- SoundtracksFolios
Written by Matt Kadane and Bubba Kadane
Performed by The New Year
Courtesy of Touch and Go Records
Details
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color