A writer of graphic novels who is given the task of writing a biography on the foremost occultist Aleister Crowley. Things start to go wrong when he discovers a rune inserted in Crowley's di... Read allA writer of graphic novels who is given the task of writing a biography on the foremost occultist Aleister Crowley. Things start to go wrong when he discovers a rune inserted in Crowley's diary when visiting New Orleans.A writer of graphic novels who is given the task of writing a biography on the foremost occultist Aleister Crowley. Things start to go wrong when he discovers a rune inserted in Crowley's diary when visiting New Orleans.
Richard Driscoll
- Carney, george
- (archive footage)
- (as Steven Craine)
Tom Sizemore
- White
- (archive footage)
Lysette Anthony
- Martha
- (archive footage)
Sylvester McCoy
- Book Seller
- (archive footage)
Robin Askwith
- Vincent Carney
- (archive footage)
Laura Frances-Martin
- Dr. Michaels
- (archive footage)
Oliver Tobias
- Dr. Klien
- (archive footage)
Gabz Barker
- Delphine
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Oh dear, where does one start? I tried to watch one of his movies last week and I could only see it as being the worst B movie possible. It impacted me so much that I can't even remember the name of it. 15 minutes in and it was a simple but effective switch off. I then read some reviews about this guy who loves his B movie stuff.
Don't get me wrong, I don't knock B movies but when they enter the realm of C and D, I couldn't help but post one of my very few reviews.
Hats off to him though...... he's very capable of enticing his viewers with a catchy Title and a semi reasonable trailer...... but oh deary me. The content is uninspiring and amateur. I get that B movies are hit and miss. But the two from this guy set the picture for anything else he does.
I got only 10 minutes into this one and for the likes of an amateur stage production, where friends/relatives feel forced to attend to support really bad and poor acting, and grit their teeth throughout, thank heavens I could just switch it off.
For enthusaists of b and c movies don't bother with this one. It's like Andrew James comes to mind every time I watch or start to watch what I think is a really good movie and turns out to be utter rubbish.
Apologies for offending anyone, I just found the movie offensive to me having wasted and waited 10 minutes to switch it off.
Don't get me wrong, I don't knock B movies but when they enter the realm of C and D, I couldn't help but post one of my very few reviews.
Hats off to him though...... he's very capable of enticing his viewers with a catchy Title and a semi reasonable trailer...... but oh deary me. The content is uninspiring and amateur. I get that B movies are hit and miss. But the two from this guy set the picture for anything else he does.
I got only 10 minutes into this one and for the likes of an amateur stage production, where friends/relatives feel forced to attend to support really bad and poor acting, and grit their teeth throughout, thank heavens I could just switch it off.
For enthusaists of b and c movies don't bother with this one. It's like Andrew James comes to mind every time I watch or start to watch what I think is a really good movie and turns out to be utter rubbish.
Apologies for offending anyone, I just found the movie offensive to me having wasted and waited 10 minutes to switch it off.
This movie sucks! Michael Madsen, Tom Sizemore and Bai Ling for some reason star in this beyond terrible film that has very little plot, awful CGI, lousy sound, cruddy picture and is also very boring. Probably the worst film of '20.
Based on the book 'Casting the Runes' by MR James, this story also name-drops the likes of HP Lovecraft and Aleister Crowley. Top-billed Steven Craine plays George Carney, a character he has played before, here a constantly stoned graphic novel illustrator.
There are some deft directorial touches; a Bladerunner-like low moan features constantly on the soundtrack, repeated regularly throughout. It is overused, but effective. As an actor, Craine makes a very good writer/producer/director - for he and Richard Driscoll are one in the same. Never one to shy away from ego, Driscoll casts himself as the lead, partner to stunning Lysette Anthony's Martha, and features in almost every scene, often in close-up. He is not a bad actor, he is certainly not a good one: in fact, he is not an actor at all, rather a void with an unconvincing, frequently incomprehensible, growling, occasionally forgotten American accent. Other characters talk to him, react to him, but his performance barely exists. How much more effective this would have been if he hadn't felt the need to play the lead - whilst not quite as bad as his Anthony Hopkins impersonation in 2001's 'Kannibal', or his Joker impression 'The Comedian' in 2018's 'Assassin's Revenge', the performance is still negligible. Twenty minutes in, the portly 69 year-old Craine trying to look unconcerned and cool in a strip club is fairly embarrassing and apart from whipping off his glasses and rubbing his brow every few minutes, is devoid of any personality whatsoever. This results in his scenes - which fill the 72 minutes running time - often being very dull.
Around him and Anthony are the supporting cast. Oliver Tobias, Bai Ling, Dudley Sutton, Sylvester McCoy, Michael Madsen and Robin Askwith are drafted in from other locations and productions, with the Carney character, and the Bladerunner soundtrack moan (which bears more than a passing resemblance to Doctor Who's TARDIS console in the 1996 television movie, also starring McCoy), the only constant. With these inclusions, the storyline soon becomes an incomprehensible jumble of set-pieces.
And yet in line with other Driscoll productions, this has much that is so good: it looks great. Sweeping panoramas and interesting optical effects that look anything other than low-budget. Scenes that aren't patchworks from other projects are well staged and nicely lit. The result is frustrating, a mixed bag of the truly risible and the genuinely impressive.
Richard Driscoll films are worth watching, not because they are particularly good on the whole, but it is always interesting to see what he is up to. He's out there and he's still doing it - and I'm glad of it. Just stay behind the camera!
There are some deft directorial touches; a Bladerunner-like low moan features constantly on the soundtrack, repeated regularly throughout. It is overused, but effective. As an actor, Craine makes a very good writer/producer/director - for he and Richard Driscoll are one in the same. Never one to shy away from ego, Driscoll casts himself as the lead, partner to stunning Lysette Anthony's Martha, and features in almost every scene, often in close-up. He is not a bad actor, he is certainly not a good one: in fact, he is not an actor at all, rather a void with an unconvincing, frequently incomprehensible, growling, occasionally forgotten American accent. Other characters talk to him, react to him, but his performance barely exists. How much more effective this would have been if he hadn't felt the need to play the lead - whilst not quite as bad as his Anthony Hopkins impersonation in 2001's 'Kannibal', or his Joker impression 'The Comedian' in 2018's 'Assassin's Revenge', the performance is still negligible. Twenty minutes in, the portly 69 year-old Craine trying to look unconcerned and cool in a strip club is fairly embarrassing and apart from whipping off his glasses and rubbing his brow every few minutes, is devoid of any personality whatsoever. This results in his scenes - which fill the 72 minutes running time - often being very dull.
Around him and Anthony are the supporting cast. Oliver Tobias, Bai Ling, Dudley Sutton, Sylvester McCoy, Michael Madsen and Robin Askwith are drafted in from other locations and productions, with the Carney character, and the Bladerunner soundtrack moan (which bears more than a passing resemblance to Doctor Who's TARDIS console in the 1996 television movie, also starring McCoy), the only constant. With these inclusions, the storyline soon becomes an incomprehensible jumble of set-pieces.
And yet in line with other Driscoll productions, this has much that is so good: it looks great. Sweeping panoramas and interesting optical effects that look anything other than low-budget. Scenes that aren't patchworks from other projects are well staged and nicely lit. The result is frustrating, a mixed bag of the truly risible and the genuinely impressive.
Richard Driscoll films are worth watching, not because they are particularly good on the whole, but it is always interesting to see what he is up to. He's out there and he's still doing it - and I'm glad of it. Just stay behind the camera!
Did you know
- GoofsSeveral characters mention H.P. Lovecraft's book of dark secrets called the Necronomicon, but they all mispronounce it as "Necro-mon-icon".
- Crazy creditsThe film starts with a long quote by Aleister Crowley about the power of the occultist to raise demons, and translates the runic inscription on the fatal note as "Death has laid a hand upon you".
- ConnectionsFeatures La Sorcellerie à travers les âges (1922)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Necromonicon
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 12 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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