Another company involved with D&D II
Lithuanian Film Studios
http://www.kinostudija.lt/en/
History of the Lithuanian Film Studio
The beginning of the Lithuanian cinema dates back to 1940 when the Lithuanian Cinema Chronicle Studio was established. In 1954 it was reorganized into a studio of features and documentaries.
When Lithuania was incorporated into the Soviet Union, a system of cinematographic control from the centre (Moscow) was created. The Soviet Union became the only authority granting subsidies to cinematography. It created a strong apparatus of ideological censorship that controlled the cinematography of various nations. The Lithuanian cinema as well as the official culture of Lithuania was highly censored during the 1950s and 1960s. Therefore, only in the 1970s, when the political situation in the Soviet Union had thawed, a true professional Lithuanian cinema emerged.
National Lithuanian literature was the main incentive of the Lithuanian cinema whose purpose was to retain national identity in the process of cultural censorship. Man, history, the past and the present, these were the topics that formed film plots and specific expression forms. The Lithuanian cinema was influenced by strong poetic tradition characterized by subjectivism. The Lithuanian cinema of the 1970s and 1980s was created by the following directors: Vytautas Žalakevičius, Almantas Grikevičius, Marijonas Giedrys, Raimundas Vabalas, Arūnas Žebriūnas as well as the representatives of the new generation, i.e. Puipa, Banionis, Lukšas, Lileikis, Bartas, Šiuša.
During 50 years the Lithuanian Film Studio produced about 2000 features, documentaries and chronicles. Though now some of the films may be considered controversial, even in the Soviet period they were awarded with prizes and won international recognition.
Today the Lithuanian Film Studio remains the leading film production base in the Eastern Europe where major international studios from the USA, Canada, France, Belgium, Poland, the UK, etc. produce their film projects.
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Here's what it says on the company's website for the
Dungeons and Dragons 2, post-production page:
Dungeons and Dragons, the Elemental Might, is the story of Berek, a desk-bound, former adventurer who must go on a quest to save Ismir from Damodar’s revenge. Having walked the land as one of the undead for a hundred years, Damodar seeks to free the evil God of undead Dragons from his mountain prison. Together, they will decimate Ismir unless Berek and his comrades can steal the source of their power, the Orb of Falazure.
Cast:
Bruce Payne
Mark Dymond
Clemmie Burton-Hill
Ellie Chidzley: Not listed on IMDb as being in the movie. Was listed at one point.
Tim Stern: Not listed on IMDb as being in the movie. Was listed at one point.
Lucy Gaskell
Director: Gerry Lively
Producers: Wolfgang Esenwein, Steve Richards
Line Producer: Christian von Tippelskirch
Production Designer: Rob Harris
Costume Designer: Daiva Petrulyte
Director of Photography: Igor Meglic
Production Manager: Arturas Dvinelis
Other Cast Mentioned on IMDb:
Roy Marsden
Steven Elder