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The Sword and the Sorcerer was released on DVD on April 24, 2001 by Starz/Anchor Bay. Shout! Factory released a special edition 4K Resolution UHD Blu-ray on March 15, 2022.
The Sword of the Barbarians (1982) The Beastmaster (1982) Conan the Barbarian (1982) The Flight of Dragons (1982, animated) The Last Unicorn (1982, animated) Gunan, King of the Barbarians (1982) Hero (1982) The Sword and the Sorcerer (1982) Sorceress (1982) Conquest (1983) Ironmaster (1983) Thor the Conqueror (1983) Deathstalker (1983) Fire and ...
Tales of an Ancient Empire is a 2010 American fantasy-sword and sorcery film directed by Albert Pyun and starring Kevin Sorbo, Michael Paré, Whitney Able, Melissa Ordway, Ralf Moeller, Lee Horsley, and Victoria Maurette. It is a sequel to Pyun's directorial debut, The Sword and the Sorcerer.
Sword and sorcery stories take place in a fictional world where magic exists. The setting can be an Earth in the mythical past or distant future, an imaginary other world or an alien planet. Sometimes sword and sorcery stories are influenced by horror, dark fantasy or science fiction. Sword and sorcery, however, does not seek to give a ...
The Sword and Sorceress series is a series of fantasy anthologies originally edited by American writer Marion Zimmer Bradley, and originally published by DAW Books. As she explained in the foreword to the first volume , she created the anthology to redress the lack of strong female protagonists in the subgenre of sword and sorcery .
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A motif from Wagner's Götterdämmerung, which was used prominently in Excalibur as the theme for the sword. Excalibur is a 1981 epic medieval fantasy film directed, cowritten and produced by John Boorman, that retells the legend of King Arthur and the knights of the Round Table, based loosely on the 15th-century Arthurian romance Le Morte d'Arthur by Thomas Malory.
A similar critique was given by John Coleman of the New Statesman, who called the film a "turgid sword-and-sorcery fable, with Ralph Richardson in a backdated kind of Star Wars of Alec Guinness role". [14] Tim Pulleine of the Monthly Film Bulletin criticized the film's lack of narrative drive and clarity to supplement the special effects. [14]