Mythica: A Quest for Heroes
Mythica: A Quest for Heroes
NR | 08 December 2014 (USA)
Mythica: A Quest for Heroes Trailers

Stuck in a life of indentured servitude, Marek dreams of becoming a wizard. When she meets the beautiful priestess Teela in need of help, she offers her assistance and provides a motley troupe. Together they go in search of Teela's sister, who was kidnapped by a wild ogre.

Reviews
Inclubabu

Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.

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Sharkflei

Your blood may run cold, but you now find yourself pinioned to the story.

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Janae Milner

Easily the biggest piece of Right wing non sense propaganda I ever saw.

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Lidia Draper

Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.

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paulclaassen

They did not have the same budget for this Lord of the Rings-ish film, but they certainly made the most of it and I can admire that. The film has a really awesome score, though, and great costumes and great locations. Some scenes are absolute fantastic with great photography, others not so great, but certainly not bad! Ultimately, I thoroughly enjoyed this fantasy action adventure with very likable characters. There are wizards and magic throughout the film and towards the end ogres, orcs, and giant spiders - this was really entertaining! Loved it.

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jasonwickham-17991

When I came across this on Amazon Prime, I watched it on a whim, thinking it would be your typical cheesy, but possibly entertaining, B-movie. What I got was a great D&D movie. I mean, it was orders of magnitude better than those crummy movies that were actually made under the D&D license.The people that made this really understand their source material and clearly have a great love for the hobby. Yes, some of the effects/creatures might be a tad on the cheesy side but, overall, this is a fantastically entertaining film, with great acting, wonderful costumes, and exciting action sequences- as well as beautiful set locations. Given that it was probably made on a relatively low budget, I find this astonishing.I was ecstatic to learn that there are 4 other films in the series and plan to see them all. I gave the movie 7 out of 10 stars.

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Rob_Taylor

I'm never too sure of what I'm going to get when I watch a low-budget, indie effort. Mostly they just seem to be terrible rip-offs of more heavily-funded, mainstream movies, but with poor scripts, dialogue and effects. Asylum....I'm looking at you.So it was with some surprise that I started watching this and realised it wasn't half-bad.Now, I admit, sometimes the acting is a bit ropey, and the effects are, at times, clearly sub-par. However, this movie, and the ones that followed it, have one thing which is absolutely essential for such low budget films to gain any traction. A decent script.Again, I'll admit, the script is hardly original, but where it shines is in the character interactions. The characters themselves are stereotypical D&D class cut-outs, but there is enough background and charm added to them by the script and actors that they work quite nicely in the context of the story.That story - about a search for a Lich's heart in order to stop it falling into the hands of an evil necromancer - will be something that will feel immediately familiar to anyone that has played D&D, or indeed any fantasy RPG in the last thirty years. In fact, the whole series seems like an affectionate homage to the genre and it works quite nicely at that level.The acting is variable, but serviceable, though in some of the later movies, a few of the lesser villains do go into full ham mode (I'm looking at you - airship captain!) The overall tone though, is far better than the budget would suggest.The effects are serviceable and, whilst poor by modern CGI standards, are sufficient to get the job done. We tend to forget, in our current era where anything can be realistically rendered on-screen, that we watched movies with far less convincing effects back in the 60's and 70's and never batted an eyelid at the jerky stop-motion, or terrible rotoscoping. Such things were part of the charm of the movie back then and this is how the effects in enthusiastic, low-budget movies should be viewed today - as part of the movie's character.Practical and make-up effects are also quite good in this movie and the costumes are not as "Hercules" as you might think, especially given the presence of Kevin Sorbo.One stand out is the music. The films have been given a really good soundtrack and a couple of nice songs, one of which "Tell Me" which plays out over the end credits to Darkspore, is absolutely superb. It is definitely the series' strongest point.Where the movies greatest asset lies, is in the fact that it never takes itself too seriously. I see some comments that compare it to the Lord of the Rings, which is just risible. There is plenty of humour in the story and the character dynamics that make it thoroughly entertaining to watch. Backgrounds are fleshed out enough to make the characters believable and events in one movie carry over to the next, if applicable.In short, the sum of its good parts outweighs the negatives by a good margin. It has a slightly quirky style that won't appeal to everyone and which put me in mind of certain TV shows like Lexx, or Farscape.Finally, the best praise I can muster for the films is this: I'd happily watch more, if they produced them, or better yet, a web series of some sort, which I think the D&Dish nature of the movies would support quite nicely.SUMMARY: A decent script, not taking itself too seriously and plenty of humour all elevate this set of films above the usual low-budget dreck that often gets made. If you like D&D, this is for you.

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DBLurker

It isn't awful. If you are pining for more LOTR/Hobbit but know it'll be a long time before someone creates expensive movies like Jackson did, you can settle for Mythica.Mythica is trying to channel Middle Earth franchise in every possible scene, from Ork's to shots of the party running through open fields. It's all OK, doesn't look bad and mimics LOTR movies just fine. Even the acting is fine, not amazing, but good enough to not make you laugh at people trying to act.The problem comes with the plot and the action.The plot is just a cliché-fest of epic proportions. Nothing you haven't seen or heard before in video games (and movies). So good luck getting invested in anything the heroes are doing. That said, the plot gives a good enough excuse to send our heroes on an adventure and that's what will keep you entertained. Until of course, the action shows up..Why do small Indie movies insist on adding CGI that they KNOW will look bad thanks to the low budget? The Ogre is terribly done, even some houses are CGI in shots and look fake thanks to no shadows or just terrible post processing done to them. The only scene that looks good with CGI is the one where a creature chases them in the forest. That creature blends well with the environment and looks good enough (acceptable). Rest of the "action scenes" with Ogre involve our heroes acting dumb while air (CGI Ogre) hits them and they fall down while a small crippled chick beats the Ogre (cause, she's the hero.. totally believable guyz). Like Gandalf, she refuses to use her powers when they could actually use them.In the end, movie isn't bad. It just could've been way better without spending more money at CGI (try hiring people who know how to do action scenes).

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