| Christopher Lambert Movie: Druids
Movie Druids |  |  | | List Price: $14.94 | | Label: Sony Pictures
Salesrank: 49934
Released: December 11, 2001 | | Our Price: $2.98 | | Used Price: $0.92 | | MPAA Rating: R (Restricted) Media: DVD | |
Editorial Review: No Description Available. Genre: Feature Film-Drama Rating: R Release Date: 2-SEP-2003 Media Type: DVD Druids Reviews: Comically Bad  2009-11-30 - I was expecting a bad movie, and this one really delivered.
The dialog is super cheesy. Christopher Lambert had a rather unheroic portrayal of the heroic leader of the Gauls. The plot, while not complex, manages to be a little confusing. The movie moves slowly so my wife fell asleep, and I imagine most viewers would not make it to the end.
Given my low expectations, I actually enjoyed this movie. The dialog was comically bad. There were some nice equestrian scenes, pretty vistas, and Klaus Maria Brandauer actually got into character as Ceasar. I am now reading more about Vercingetorix, who was so poorly portrayed in this laughable film.
Not wrth the money  2009-10-09 - Sorry folks, but this movie is a shocker. Bad acting, bad storyline, bad script. It was just bad! It just isn't worth the money I paid for it, which wasn't much.
Christopher Lambert has made a few bad ones in his day but I reckon this one takes the cake.
Staggeringly awful  2009-06-18 - There is a great film to be made about Vercingetorix's doomed attempt to drive the Romans out of Gaul and Gaius Julius Caesar's subsequent near-genocide of the local population. This is not that film. Unfortunately, Vercingetorix, aka Druids, doesn't even seem to even want to be that film.
You know you're in trouble when the film begins with a typical bit of Rospo Pallenberg-scripted pseudo-mythological babble about prophecies that tips you off that this is more interested in fantasy than history long before you see Max Von Sydow's druid (another of his paying the rent jobs) or Christophe Lambert's Highlanderish Vercingetorix ("You want to live forever? Then follow me!"). There is some lip-service given to the reasons the Gauls were defeated - ironically their democracy made them vulnerable to indecision when they could have reinforced Vercingetorix's troops where Caesar's ruthlessly autocratic style of leadership was at least decisive. But unfortunately it's rendered laughable by the inept direction, terrible performances and risible dialogue (even Klaus Maria Brandauer can't do anything with lines like "The light of my victory will make my invisible past failures heavier."), while the film's production design looks like the producers bought a job lot of used costumes off the Asterix films and then dreamt up a film to use them in. Even the battle scenes are completely botched - indeed, despite a good chunk of the Bulgarian armed forces being roped into the picture as extras, director Jacques Dorfman can't even get a good shot of the Roman formations marching by: it actually looks as if he forgot to say action until they'd nearly passed by.
There's some unintentional humour to be found, but mostly this is just so bad it's bad. You're better off watching the section of Uli Edel's 2002 miniseries Julius Caesar that deals with the subjugation of Gaul instead.
Take the good things from this movie  2008-05-21 - It seems that historically based movies suffer from the critics as much as horror features do. While this is not an outstanding piece of cinema, it succeeds in showing the last days of the Roman campaign against gaulic celts. Acting is not very good (Christopher Lambert never been a good actor), but I liked the scenary and the movie pace. At the end, an entertaining movie where you learn some about the history of Roman conquest in western Europe. Lastly, a descent movie for the price.
WTF!  2008-03-13 - Simply a tie-breaker for the WORST film in history (the other being HP Lovecraft's "The Tomb"). Take my advice and avoid these films if you have ANY self-value.
|
|