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The Dungeonmaster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dungeonmaster
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written by
  • Allen Actor
  • Dave Allen
  • Charles Band
  • John Carl Buechler
  • Jeffrey Byron
  • Peter Manoogian
  • Ted Nicolaou
  • Rosemarie Turko
Produced byCharles Band
Starring
CinematographyMac Ahlberg
Music by
Production
company
Charles Band production
Distributed byEmpire Pictures
Release date
  • August 24, 1984 (1984-08-24) (U.S.)
[1]
Running time
73 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Dungeonmaster (originally Ragewar: The Challenges of Excalibrate and Digital Knights) is a 1984 American anthology fantasy film produced by Charles Band, and is split up into seven distinct story segments, each written and directed by a different person: Dave Allen, Band, John Carl Buechler, Steven Ford, Peter Manoogian, Ted Nicolaou and Rosemarie Turko.[2] The film's theme was influenced by the popularity of Disney's 1982 film Tron and the roleplaying game Dungeons & Dragons.

Principal photography began in 1983 but the film was not completed until 1984. The film features an appearance by the heavy metal band W.A.S.P. The film is known for the line of dialogue "I reject your reality and I substitute my own".[3] A sequel to the movie was shot and edited in 1988, but never completed.[4]

Plot

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Paul Bradford (Jeffrey Byron) is a skilled computer programmer who lives with his girlfriend, Gwen (Leslie Wing), and "X-CaliBR8", a quasi-sentient personal computer that Paul programmed and which he interacts with via a neural interface. Gwen is jealous of Paul's unusually close relationship with X-CaliBR8, to whom Paul has given a female voice, and fears that their relationship will be destroyed by Paul's reliance on X-CaliBR8 for his various day-to-day activities.

One night, Paul and Gwen are both transported to a Hellish realm presided over by Mestema (Richard Moll), an ancient, demonic sorcerer who has spent millennia seeking a worthy opponent with whom to do battle. Having long defeated his enemies with magic, Mestema has become intrigued with technology, and wishes to pit his skills against Paul's, with the winner claiming Gwen. Arming Paul with a portable version of X-CaliBR8 (which takes the form of a computerized wrist band), Mestema begins transporting Paul into a variety of scenarios in which he must defeat various opponents. Most of the challenges involve Paul using his X-CaliBR8 wristband to shoot people, monsters, and objects with laser beams.

After Paul completes Mestema's various challenges, the two engage in a final battle, which takes the form of a fist fight in which Paul kills Mestema by throwing him into a pit of lava. After Mestema dies, Paul and Gwen are transported back to their house, where Gwen expresses her acceptance of X-CaliBR8 and suggests that she and Paul get married.

Cast

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Demons of the Dead

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Heavy Metal

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Stone Canyon Giant

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Slasher

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Cave Beast

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Desert Pursuit

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Segments

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Release

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Scream Factory released the film on DVD for the first time in October 2013, along with Contamination 7, Catacombs and Cellar Dweller as part of the second volume of their Scream Factory All-Night Horror Marathon series.

Shout! Factory released The Dungeonmaster on a double feature Blu-ray along with Eliminators in December 2015.[2]

In pop culture

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In MythBusters, Adam Savage quotes this movie.[5]

Notes

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  1. ^ Brother of star Jeffrey Byron. Credited as Steve Ford in tribute to their godfather John Ford.

References

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  1. ^ "Digital Knights (1984) a.k.a The Dungeonmaster (1985)".
  2. ^ a b Coffel, Chris (2016-02-11). "[Blu-ray Review] 'The Dungeonmaster' and 'Eliminators' – A Look at the Glory Days of Empire Pictures". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 2020-09-21.
  3. ^ Nicholas Bitonti (March 24, 2015), "On using Meetup to play D&D with a group of strangers", Detroit Metro Times, archived from the original on March 8, 2021, retrieved July 31, 2019
  4. ^ The Evil Clergyman, Full Moon Streaming, archived from the original on January 4, 2019, retrieved July 31, 2019
  5. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Ask Adam Savage: Origin of "I Reject Your Reality ..."". YouTube.
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