D&D Movie/TV The D&D Movie Reviews Are Coming In

While Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves doesn't come out until March 31st, reviewers have...

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While Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves doesn't come out until March 31st, reviewers have seen early screenings--and so far at least—it's all almost all overwhelmingly positive.

Of course, while those who follow genre movie news will know that's not an unusual pattern among early screenings, with things starting to settle down a bit later, Rotten Tomatoes currently has the movie at 100%. We can expect that to drop.

[UPDATE -- the Rotten Tomatoes score is now starting to drop and was at 92% at the time of this edit.]
[UPDATE -- now 84%.]


Hollywood Reporter said "An adaptation that will appeal to the nostalgic side of existing fans and entertain those whose eyes glaze over at the mention of Dungeon Masters, bards or druids." Variety's verdict was "It’s at once cheesy and charming, synthetic and spectacular, cozily derivative and rambunctiously inventive, a processed piece of junk-culture joy that, by the end, may bring a tear to your eye." Den of Geek says "At last, here is a crowdpleaser that actually pleases, and not least of all because the stakes are as small as an evening with some mates going on "a quest" by way of a 20-sided die." And Total Film speaks of "A Pine-fuelled mix of humour, handsome settings and high-stakes action turns the beloved board game into a big-screen treat."

Other outlets agree. According to Polygon "Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is everything a D&D fan could want" and The Wrap says "This Hilarious Epic Fantasy Is a Total Blast". Deadline also gives it a positive review, saying "With renewed interest in the fantasy genre, it’s good to see something outside of Lord of the Rings and Game of Thrones getting it right and having a good time. Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is also one of the better game adaptations to hit theaters due to all of the elements coming together — a strong cast, a decent story, dynamic direction and pleasing special effects."

Rolling Stone is a little more tempered, however, observing that "‘Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ Proves Chris Pine Can Save Anything" but warns that "no matter how much the creators confess their love of the game, all of those shout-outs to creatures, character types, campaign details and so on feel like annoying distractions."

RogerEbert.com feels that "The film often feels like it’s faking what the creators love about the game instead of trying to translate it from one medium to another."

But so far, so good! We'll have to wait to see if the trend holds up once the movie is out, but for those hoping we'll finally have a decent D&D movie--it looks like there is hope to be had!
 

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darjr

I crit!
I'm finding mixed things on the interwebs. Did Hasbro sell off eOne, sell off part of eOne but kept enough to make more movies, or just have it up for sale?
Sold most of eOne. As far as I know the folks from eOne that worked on the movie are still there at Hasbro. Note that was a while ago though
 

Mistwell

Crusty Old Meatwad (he/him)
To everyone who said they will boycott the movie.

You do you, of course, but really I think you’re depriving yourself of a good movie more than you’re sending a message to Hasbro.
Yeah WOTC did some "early consulting" on the script to this...and that's about it. It's Paramount and Titanic Studios. If it succeeds they get almost the entire benefit and if it fails they get almost all the blame. WOTC gets some secondary benefits, but then so does every corporation which has a tie-in to the movie. Which, in this case, is a fair number of corporations. Any boycott of the movie will have essentially no meaningful impact on WOTC.
 

bedir than

Full Moon Storyteller
Yeah WOTC did some "early consulting" on the script to this...and that's about it. It's Paramount and Titanic Studios. If it succeeds they get almost the entire benefit and if it fails they get almost all the blame. WOTC gets some secondary benefits, but then so does every corporation which has a tie-in to the movie. Which, in this case, is a fair number of corporations. Any boycott of the movie will have essentially no meaningful impact on WOTC.
They had someone on set frequently and someone on call often, according to Daley.
 






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