Actors: Ed Skrein, Karel Roden, Stanley Weber, Dave Legeno
Director: Jim Weedon
Format: Blu-ray, Widescreen
Language: English
Number of discs: 1
Rated: Unrated
Studio: Well Go USA
Release Date: May 26, 2015
Run Time: 87 minutes
The
director has changed, but it is still very clear that Sword of Vengeance was made by the same people who created Hammer of the Gods (2013), though this
is not necessarily a good thing. The films share producers and writer Matthew
Read, but more important, both have an emphasis on visual style over character
or plot. Sword of Vengeance has plot
and character beyond Hammer of the Gods,
but in order to get to these sequences it forces the audience to endure endless
over-stylized cinematography (from metal music video cinematographer, August
Jakobsson), and senseless slow motion shots that drag out insignificant moments
even longer. I can understand fight scenes being slow motion, however
derivative of 300 that now seems, but
what need is there to drag out a shot of a character riding a horse from one
end of the frame to the other?
At the center of
Sword of Vengeance is a revenge tale,
as the title suggests, though the details of this need for vengeance are kept a
mystery for much of the film. Perhaps this was another attempt to stretch out
the material, because it doesn’t work that well as a mystery. The revelation
that the vengeance seeking stranger referred to as Shadow Walker (Stanley
Weber) is actually a Norman prince who has escaped slavery to seek out the man
who killed his father comes as little surprise, perhaps because of the numerous
times we are forced to endure the flashback sequence of the events.
Shadow Walker finds his father’s
murderer, Earl Durant (Karel Roden), a man who also happens to be his uncle,
but needs the help of a group of farmers who have been exiled by the same
oppressive man. This could be accomplished with our hero establishing
relationships with the farmers, and he does get quite close physically to one
the members of the revolution (played by Annabelle Wallis), but he simply
exploits them for his desire for revenge. His approach may lack finesse, but
the outcome is exactly as you would expect from this over-used plot. The point
is not the story however. The point of the film appears to be making each of
the shots look as bad-ass as possible. It feels like watching an 87 minute
director’s reel of someone obsessed with Zack Snyder.
The Blu-ray
features all of this unnecessary and surprisingly unsatisfying visual excess in
high definition and DTS-HD Master audio. The special features include
interviews with director Jim Weedon and the film’s producers, Rupert Preston
and Huberta Von Liel. There is also a behind-the-scenes featurette and the
film’s trailer.
Entertainment Value:
6/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 5/10
Historical
Significance: 3/10
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