'Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves' Releases First Trailer, and a Tavern at Comic-Con (cinemablend.com) 39
Thursday the first trailer appeared online for Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves — and 15 million people have watched it. "Here's the thing. We're a team of thieves..." actor Chris Pine says in a voiceover. "We didn't mean to unleash the greatest evil the world has ever known. But we're going to fix it."
The video's description explains that "A charming thief and a band of unlikely adventurers undertake an epic heist to retrieve a lost relic, but things go dangerously awry when they run afoul of the wrong people. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves brings the rich world and playful spirit of the legendary roleplaying game to the big screen in a hilarious and action-packed adventure."
The trailer also features Michelle Rodriguez, Regé-Jean Page, Hugh Grant, and a Druid that can turn into an Owlbear.
But at Comic-Con's Gaslamp Quarter there were also photo ops inside the legendary gelatinous cube, at a pop-up tavern serving glow-in-the-dark Dragon's Brew. The official "Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Tavern Experience" drew this rave review from Esquire. "Rest assured, friends, if the actual Dungeons and Dragons movie is anything like the tavern, it'll be a rocking, hilarious, self-aware, and — most importantly! — a fun trip." The team behind Dungeons and Dragons rigged the bar so that it would rumble like hell and fill with smoke whenever a dragon appeared on a massive video screen at the front. (We were supposed to infer that the tavern was under attack....)
Save a grog for me.
"Based on what we've seen, this movie looks like it's going to be a whole lot of fun," writes CinemaBlend: If you're hyped up for the campaign Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is promising here, you can take your place at the metaphorical gaming table starting March 3, 2023.
As the movie's trailer asks, "Who needs heroes when you have thieves?"
The video's description explains that "A charming thief and a band of unlikely adventurers undertake an epic heist to retrieve a lost relic, but things go dangerously awry when they run afoul of the wrong people. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves brings the rich world and playful spirit of the legendary roleplaying game to the big screen in a hilarious and action-packed adventure."
The trailer also features Michelle Rodriguez, Regé-Jean Page, Hugh Grant, and a Druid that can turn into an Owlbear.
But at Comic-Con's Gaslamp Quarter there were also photo ops inside the legendary gelatinous cube, at a pop-up tavern serving glow-in-the-dark Dragon's Brew. The official "Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Tavern Experience" drew this rave review from Esquire. "Rest assured, friends, if the actual Dungeons and Dragons movie is anything like the tavern, it'll be a rocking, hilarious, self-aware, and — most importantly! — a fun trip." The team behind Dungeons and Dragons rigged the bar so that it would rumble like hell and fill with smoke whenever a dragon appeared on a massive video screen at the front. (We were supposed to infer that the tavern was under attack....)
Save a grog for me.
"Based on what we've seen, this movie looks like it's going to be a whole lot of fun," writes CinemaBlend: If you're hyped up for the campaign Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is promising here, you can take your place at the metaphorical gaming table starting March 3, 2023.
As the movie's trailer asks, "Who needs heroes when you have thieves?"
You can imagine the pitch (Score:3)
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"Guardian of the Galaxy meets Critical Roll. The geeks will love it!"
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This is the 4th D&D movie, the others being lower budget affairs. There only one I really remember is 3, which was straight to video I think. It wasn't bad. It wasn't great either but fun if you like D&D.
The best unofficial D&D movie ever made us Hawk the Slayer. At least that's how we used to play D&D.
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The best unofficial D&D movie ever made us Hawk the Slayer.
The best unofficial D&D movie is The sword and the Sorcerer. Its plot was clearly written by 1/2 a dozen tween boys in a basement.
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"The best unofficial D&D movie ever made us Hawk the Slayer. At least that's how we used to play D&D."
I first saw that when I was a kid. It was amazing!
Then I saw it again in my 30s. Oh, the effects were so bad. I couldn't "unsee" how bad and it ruined the movie for me.
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The low budget is what makes it great! The sets are literally falling apart, within the first minute you can see a random bit of one of them fall through the frame. The "magic" is just a can is silly string. I.e. it's on the same level as most of our D&D games.
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Hasbro money machine goes whirr....
Wizards of the Coast is one of Hasbro's more profitable divisions, because stuff like Magic the Gathering and Dungeons and Dragons are very cheap to produce, can earn a lot of profit, and have a ton of IP to license out and do stuff with.
Magic the Gathering - well, they print cards - printing cards is a stupidly cheap thing to do even at a high quality printer, so yo
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Looked more like "If you can't make it good, make it CGI" to me.
I really have no idea whether it's any good or not, but the wall-to-wall CGI isn't encouraging.
Re: You can imagine the pitch (Score:2)
You can't do D&D without wall to wall CGI or it wouldn't really be D&D. Instead it would be whatever bits you could manage to force into your limited story, puppets, and makeup artists.
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CGI is supposed to support the plot, not supplant it.
An awful lot of swords-and-sorcery films were made with zero CGI. They replied on plot and acting to keep them going rather than special effects.
Re: You can imagine the pitch (Score:2)
A lot of sword and sorcery films aren't D&D. We're not talking about Conan we're talking about D&D. Pay attention.
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Re: You can imagine the pitch (Score:2)
Those other sword and sorcery films have nothing to do with D&D. You're arguing a strawman.
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We only have the trailer for this D&D movie but it's clearly a blatant copy, almost beat for beat. But the virtual no-names writing & directing it hardly assure good things of the final product.
based on cartoon. (Score:1)
Re: based on cartoon. (Score:2)
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I wonder if part of the reason is that the AD&D universe has a ton of content in it, be it Athas (from the Prism Pentad), Neverwinter, Forgotten Realms, the Outer Planes, Spelljammer spheres, and so on. Finding some place that is common to everyone is tough.
Plus, fantasy is a saturated field. Unless it is new or esoteric IP like the 1980s movies (Krull, Legend, Willow, Neverending Story), it is hard to have stuff that is new that can bring audiences in and get a movie past the "cult classic" stage. F
Why D&D? (Score:2)
It looks fun, but (based on a short trailer, of course) I'm not seeing the association with D&D specifically. The subtitle could be the whole title and the film would look just as fun.
Is this something funded by Hasbro with hopes of starting their own MCU type of thing?
Is there enough name recognition in the general population (those that never played D&D) that a producer felt it necessary to license the name?
I'll say it a third time, this film looks fun; I'm simply curious about the association wit
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Re:Why D&D? (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not seeing the association with D&D specifically.
Seems to have quite a bit, to me. Chris Pine is a bard. The black dragon spits acid. An owlbear and a gelatinous cube. Dice rolling to see if an attack hits.
[I made up that last one.]
I saw quite a few... (Score:1)
It looks fun, but (based on a short trailer, of course) I'm not seeing the association with D&D specifically.
To me it had a number of fun D&D references, the ones I remember offhand are acid dragon (almost never have seen those outside D&D), the mimic chest, the various classes represented (including bard).
And well, a lot of dragons generally. And Dungeons.
Also I'm not super deep in the lore but from what I've seen reactions of that green fire sword is very D&D.
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Hmm... (Score:1)
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I predict this movie will get suck harder than the proverbial hooker with the garden hose and golf ball. Or it will be okay. From the trailers I'm not seeing much that makes me want to go see it just from the bad memories of the other movies.
A quite self aware movie (Score:2)
Here's the thing. We're a team of thieves... We didn't mean to unleash the greatest evil the world has ever known. But we're going to fix it."
Seriously, the joke writes itself...
D&D? All thieves? (Score:3)
It's just going to be one long series of attempts to backstab
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And like in every stealth-based game, as soon as shit goes tits-up, you're fucked because nobody can fight in their origami armor.
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Or they have enough thieves to kill off one or two of them while adding other characters (of other classes) for the ending (or a sequel)?
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Thief is a profession, not a class. :)
As far as classes in the party I noticed a bard, a paladin, a wizard, a fighter (maybe barbarian?), and a druid.
Movie looks like it could a lot of fun!
Mmmmm... (Score:2)
Tasty ad... Eat your advertisement... [youtube.com] Mmm...
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I bet that it will be more popular than the Amazon LOTR movie, which btw, doesn't rely on ticket sales but rather amazon prime subscriptions.
Forget Libraries of Congress (Score:2)
The question for anything now is: Does it have a Druid that can turn into an Owlbear?
Sounds like my typical D&D campaign... (Score:2)
Faranz (Score:1)