Toothless and friends are back for a brand new adventure that'll take them to an area never seen before, the hidden world of dragons! Check out the gorgeous trailer within...
For years, we've been able to experience the relationship between men and dragons evolve to a symbiotic, thriving partnership in Dreamworks' animated epic, How to Train Your Dragon. The first film took us on a brilliant adventure with Hiccup and Toothless building a friendship over kindness and a common enemy. The second one pushed the envelope in terms of action. Now, How to Train Your Dragon 3, labeled The Hidden World, explores the fruits of Hiccup, Toothless, and Astrid's labor, peaceful civilization of Man and Dragon. While all might seem well, at the moment, it turns out the utopia they have created may be devolving. When a Dragon Hunter, of sorts, reveals his intentions to destroy everything Hiccup loves, unless...
For years, we've been able to experience the relationship between men and dragons evolve to a symbiotic, thriving partnership in Dreamworks' animated epic, How to Train Your Dragon. The first film took us on a brilliant adventure with Hiccup and Toothless building a friendship over kindness and a common enemy. The second one pushed the envelope in terms of action. Now, How to Train Your Dragon 3, labeled The Hidden World, explores the fruits of Hiccup, Toothless, and Astrid's labor, peaceful civilization of Man and Dragon. While all might seem well, at the moment, it turns out the utopia they have created may be devolving. When a Dragon Hunter, of sorts, reveals his intentions to destroy everything Hiccup loves, unless...
- 6/8/2018
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Matt Malliaros)
- Cinelinx
Year: 2010
Directors: James MacPherson
Writers: Anne K. Black/Jason Faller/Kynan Griffin/ Justin Partridge
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: agentorange
Rating: 7 out of 10
My theory that Park Rangers derive their powers from their moustaches was proved right when I caught Orcs! over the weekend. You might have thought they get them from their excessive slacking, pot smoking or even their ability to keep cashew crumbs off their boxer shorts, but no - it's all about the moustache, baby.
Orcs! is a low budget horror/comedy about Orcs that come down from their mountain home and terrorize a Nationl Park. The film aims for the funny bone before the juggular and while it won't have you rolling on the floor, it at least has what it takes to make you consistently crack a smile. This is due in huge part to the pairing of Park Rangers Cal played by Adam Johnson...
Directors: James MacPherson
Writers: Anne K. Black/Jason Faller/Kynan Griffin/ Justin Partridge
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: agentorange
Rating: 7 out of 10
My theory that Park Rangers derive their powers from their moustaches was proved right when I caught Orcs! over the weekend. You might have thought they get them from their excessive slacking, pot smoking or even their ability to keep cashew crumbs off their boxer shorts, but no - it's all about the moustache, baby.
Orcs! is a low budget horror/comedy about Orcs that come down from their mountain home and terrorize a Nationl Park. The film aims for the funny bone before the juggular and while it won't have you rolling on the floor, it at least has what it takes to make you consistently crack a smile. This is due in huge part to the pairing of Park Rangers Cal played by Adam Johnson...
- 4/10/2011
- QuietEarth.us
As Age Of The Dragons arrives on DVD and Blu-ray, Duncan takes a look at the history of dragons in the movies…
It's no wonder so many of us have grown up geeky, for dragons have been a strong mainstay of children's movies for decades now. With their inextricable link to the fantasy genre, many of us have been brainwashed into a fixation with them before we even knew what was happening. Well, that's a decent enough excuse, anyway, should you ever find yourself needing one in a dragon-based argument, which I'm sure there aren't nearly enough of.
Pity the children growing up from the mid-nineties onwards, as they've barely been able to make it through one whole year without a dragon movie being released, a trend which sees no sign of slowing. This year has already seen the release of Age Of The Dragons, starring Danny Glover and Vinnie Jones...
It's no wonder so many of us have grown up geeky, for dragons have been a strong mainstay of children's movies for decades now. With their inextricable link to the fantasy genre, many of us have been brainwashed into a fixation with them before we even knew what was happening. Well, that's a decent enough excuse, anyway, should you ever find yourself needing one in a dragon-based argument, which I'm sure there aren't nearly enough of.
Pity the children growing up from the mid-nineties onwards, as they've barely been able to make it through one whole year without a dragon movie being released, a trend which sees no sign of slowing. This year has already seen the release of Age Of The Dragons, starring Danny Glover and Vinnie Jones...
- 3/24/2011
- Den of Geek
Age Of The Dragons *
Stars: Danny Glover, Vinnie Jones, Corey Sevier, Kepa Kruse, Sofia Pernas | Written by Anne. K Black, McKay Daines | Directed by Ryan Little
Age Of The Dragons had the potential to be gloriously trashy. A reimagining of Moby Dick but with dragons instead of the titular white whale, and starring Danny Glover, this has got “Cult Classic” written all over it. Unfortunately, it’s just as bad as it sounds but not bad enough to be ironically enjoyable.
The story will be familiar to anyone that’s read or seen the source material. Whaler (or in this case Dragon Hunter) Ishmael (Corey Sevier) and his companion Queequeg (Kepa Kruse) board the ship Peaquod (this time a mobile fort on wheels) run by the enigmatic Captain Ahab (Danny Glover), a figure shrouded in legend after a white dragon killed his sister and left him disfigured. His crew is...
Stars: Danny Glover, Vinnie Jones, Corey Sevier, Kepa Kruse, Sofia Pernas | Written by Anne. K Black, McKay Daines | Directed by Ryan Little
Age Of The Dragons had the potential to be gloriously trashy. A reimagining of Moby Dick but with dragons instead of the titular white whale, and starring Danny Glover, this has got “Cult Classic” written all over it. Unfortunately, it’s just as bad as it sounds but not bad enough to be ironically enjoyable.
The story will be familiar to anyone that’s read or seen the source material. Whaler (or in this case Dragon Hunter) Ishmael (Corey Sevier) and his companion Queequeg (Kepa Kruse) board the ship Peaquod (this time a mobile fort on wheels) run by the enigmatic Captain Ahab (Danny Glover), a figure shrouded in legend after a white dragon killed his sister and left him disfigured. His crew is...
- 3/2/2011
- by Jez Sands
- Nerdly
The Maze Movie PosterDirector: Steve Shimek.
Writers: Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez.
The Maze is a film from second time director Steve Shimek (Dragon Hunter) and writers Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez. The film is moving to DVD October 19th through Monarch Home Video and the film puts "five friends...into a corn maze," (Monarch) where a killer wants to play a game of hide and seek with knives. The film is sheer aMAZEment and horror fans will appreciate the many gory deaths and the slow reveal of the killer, who plays both sides of the law.
The film begins on a dare, as a group of friends challenge each other to enter an abandoned corn maze. A game of tag ensues and soon one addition to the game brings much brutal death via hack and slash, decapitations, strangulation, and a Mexican necktie. One woman goes face with this lunatic...
Writers: Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez.
The Maze is a film from second time director Steve Shimek (Dragon Hunter) and writers Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez. The film is moving to DVD October 19th through Monarch Home Video and the film puts "five friends...into a corn maze," (Monarch) where a killer wants to play a game of hide and seek with knives. The film is sheer aMAZEment and horror fans will appreciate the many gory deaths and the slow reveal of the killer, who plays both sides of the law.
The film begins on a dare, as a group of friends challenge each other to enter an abandoned corn maze. A game of tag ensues and soon one addition to the game brings much brutal death via hack and slash, decapitations, strangulation, and a Mexican necktie. One woman goes face with this lunatic...
- 8/17/2010
- by 28DaysLaterAnalysis@gmail.com (Michael Ross Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
Cornfields are always a terrible place to be in a horror film. Once the sun goes down, it goes from a fixture of American agriculture to a scene of horror haunted by deranged pagan children, murderous scarecrows come to life, or, as in the case of the October DVD release The Maze, a corn maze becomes the perfect stalking grounds for a psychopathic slasher.
Monarch Entertainment will release The Maze to DVD on October 19th just in time for Halloween. Steve Shimek, maker of the 2008 low budget fantasy flick Dragon Hunter, directs The Maze starring Shalaina Castle, Brandon Pearson, Clare Niederpruem, Kyle Paul, Tye Nelson, Luke Drake, Richard Dutcher, Sarah Kent, Adam Johnson, and Marty Steinberg from a script by first-time writers Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez.
Five friends break into a corn maze in the middle of the night and decide to play a harmless game of tag. Little...
Monarch Entertainment will release The Maze to DVD on October 19th just in time for Halloween. Steve Shimek, maker of the 2008 low budget fantasy flick Dragon Hunter, directs The Maze starring Shalaina Castle, Brandon Pearson, Clare Niederpruem, Kyle Paul, Tye Nelson, Luke Drake, Richard Dutcher, Sarah Kent, Adam Johnson, and Marty Steinberg from a script by first-time writers Katy Baldwin and Timothy Gutierrez.
Five friends break into a corn maze in the middle of the night and decide to play a harmless game of tag. Little...
- 8/11/2010
- by Foywonder
- DreadCentral.com
Dragon Storm
Stars: Maxwell Caulfield, Angel Boris, John Rhys-Davies, Tony Amendola | Written by Patrick Phillips, Sam Wells | Directed by Steven Furst
A heavily singed farmer staggers at the fortress of King Fastrad (John Rhys-Davies), hot on his heels, 5 dragons hell bent on getting their flame on. When the dragons follow this attack up with one on his castle, Fastrad is forced to seek the aid of rival King Wednesbury. He is aided through the forest by Silas, a hunter (Caulfield in bearskins and fright wig) but denounces him as a thief on arrival. While Farstrad attempts to take over Wednesbury’s castle, Silas is recruited as Dragon Hunter, getting together a motley crew (is there any other kind?) to attack and kill the alien menace. Oh, sorry, didn’t I mention that? The dragons have hatched from large meteor rocks. Why? Who knows? They just have. Keep up.
Dragon Storm,...
Stars: Maxwell Caulfield, Angel Boris, John Rhys-Davies, Tony Amendola | Written by Patrick Phillips, Sam Wells | Directed by Steven Furst
A heavily singed farmer staggers at the fortress of King Fastrad (John Rhys-Davies), hot on his heels, 5 dragons hell bent on getting their flame on. When the dragons follow this attack up with one on his castle, Fastrad is forced to seek the aid of rival King Wednesbury. He is aided through the forest by Silas, a hunter (Caulfield in bearskins and fright wig) but denounces him as a thief on arrival. While Farstrad attempts to take over Wednesbury’s castle, Silas is recruited as Dragon Hunter, getting together a motley crew (is there any other kind?) to attack and kill the alien menace. Oh, sorry, didn’t I mention that? The dragons have hatched from large meteor rocks. Why? Who knows? They just have. Keep up.
Dragon Storm,...
- 5/26/2010
- by Sarah
- Nerdly
Here are the new MPAA ratings from Bulletin No: 2065. Beyond The Epic Run Rated PG For thematic elements, mild language and some smoking. The Boys: The Sherman Brothers' Story Rated PG For mild thematic elements, smoking images and brief language. Drag Me To Hell Rated PG-13 For sequences of horror violence, terror, disturbing images and language. Release Date: May 29, 2009 Dragon Hunter Rated PG-13 For action violence. Flying By Rated PG-13 For language. The Golden Boys Rated PG For mild language and smoking. I Hate Valentine's Day Rated PG-13 For some sexual content. London To Brighton Rated R For disturbing violent and sexual content, and strong language. The Lost And Found Family Rated PG For drug material and thematic elements. Only The Brave Rated R For some war violence and disturbing images. Resolved Rated PG-13 For some strong language and teen smoking. Satan Rated R For strong violence including a brutal rape,...
- 4/15/2009
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Oh dear, I'm gonna hear about this from quietearth (who very much dislikes his fantasy) but hot-dang if I don't like to veg out and just enjoy me some low budget dragon slayage once and a while! In what looks to be a film that's at least one step up from Asylum material (but still likely to be destined for Sunday afternoons on Scifi channel) Dragon Hunters at least looks like it's got some love behind it, and that's what matters to me. Plus the story sounds pretty rad.
Orphaned as a baby when his parents were killed in a vicious orc attack, Kendrick of Elwood was raised by his elder brother, Darius. Though only nine at the time, Darius devoted his life to Kendrick's care and to purging orcs from their land.
Now, after years of absence, a new danger emerges, more lethal than the threat of orcs or men.
Orphaned as a baby when his parents were killed in a vicious orc attack, Kendrick of Elwood was raised by his elder brother, Darius. Though only nine at the time, Darius devoted his life to Kendrick's care and to purging orcs from their land.
Now, after years of absence, a new danger emerges, more lethal than the threat of orcs or men.
- 1/7/2009
- QuietEarth.us
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