Saturday, August 8, 2020

Deathstalker III: The Warriors From Hell (1988)



I actually enjoyed this movie quite a bit despite it being mostly a piece of crap. At the start I thought maybe we were getting a scene that would have little to do with the plot, to perhaps set the tone or show how evil the bad guys are, or maybe a glimpse at Deathstalker's skinny lithe sidekick. But no, it's Deathstalker himself. 

The actor playing Deathstalker (John Allen Nelson) in all honesty seems to do his best, he's just too skinny and talkative to be our friendly fantasy neighborhood Deathstalker. He did grow on me, however, and I started to imagine this was a prequel movie, young Deathstalker. Back before the muscles and the magic sword, the real fights and the actually mean powerful bad guys, this was the adventure where Deathstalker cut his teeth. And that mindset made the whole movie feel more right. 

One thing I noticed is that he gets knocked unconscious a lot. It would make sense that he'd switch around his fighting technique and work out more so he could get tougher, and learn to watch his back to avoid this. He had to get more alert if he was to take on tougher foes. 

He also relies on allies a lot more. Deathstalker always has allies, but in this one they save him more than once. As a young guy he had to learn how to save others by hanging with his cool pals. Got it. Nice origin story stuff. 

There's also twin princesses played by Carla Sands (very weird. Look her up). It's another Deathstalker movie with two characters played by the same actress. It doesn't really make any sense or have much of a point, but it's a fun touch. The princess isn't interesting enough to really capture Deathstalker's attention and that's pretty much her character. 

The movie centers around both Deathstalker and an evil guy trying to get these crystals that give power when all together, or treasure, or something. The evil guy, played by Tom Christopher, doesn't seem that bad though. He's mostly a rich ahole that is mean to his girlfriend. He throws parties and has random people over all the time, and has crowds of bumbling soldiers at his disposal. They all live as a happy family in his castle. 

Deathstalker's main love interest is this kinda feral girl that he meets in the woods who's a good archer (played by Claudia Inchaurregui) even though he doesn't even really seduce her. I have to imagine it was the heartbreak of losing her that leads to his free love cold hearted attitude in later years. 

There's also a wizard that supposedly has intel on the crystals but then he doesn't, and he doesn't do much except teleport into the castle in dramatic fashion and then have his life threatened over and over. I'm thinking, teleport out, bud! Go home! But he's Deathstalker's friend so he sticks around. He looks like he's out of an old Kung Fu movie with his big hair and beard, but he's got zero moves. 

Besides Deathstalker, every character's name is impossible to remember in this one. You can look then up but I swear, they still won't ring a bell. It doesn't detract from anything, just something to know. 

The fight scenes are noticeably terrible. I especially like one where Deathstalker and the bad guy are dual wielding, Deathstalker is even holding a candelabra, and they lock up and do this awkward slow spin careful dance move. So weird. Anyway, all the sword play looks like middleschoolers in the backyard, hopping around on a jungle gym with cardboard swords, trying not to hit each other too hard. This is the most boring aspect of the movie. 

Finally, while the cover to this movie has super cool art, it has absolutely nothing to do with the film as far as I can tell. It's like, at this point they're just putting a muscle bound dude with a scantily clad lady on the cover and boom... Deathstalker. Who cares what actually happens in the movie. That's fine. It's silly. It's fun. Watch it if you like this kind of silly stuff. I do. Goodnight. 




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