Director John McTiernan takes viewers back to 900 A.D. in THE 13th WARRIOR. After courting "an untouchable" Muslim princess, Ahmed (Antonio Banderas) is banished and sent North as an emissary. When traveling from Baghdad to Saqaliba, he stumbles into an encampment of Vikings. At first repulsed by their Nordic ways, Ahmed soon .. Read more
| Starring | Antonio Banderas, Diane Venora, Omar Sharif |
|---|---|
| Director | John McTiernan |
| Genres | Drama |
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Director John McTiernan takes viewers back to 900 A.D. in THE 13th WARRIOR. After courting "an untouchable" Muslim princess, Ahmed (Antonio Banderas) is banished and sent North as an emissary. When traveling from Baghdad to Saqaliba, he stumbles into an encampment of Vikings. At first repulsed by their Nordic ways, Ahmed soon grows fond of the Northerners and joins their party.
When news is brought that a horde of flesh eating monsters are ravaging the land, the mystic Oracle ordains that a group of 13 must travel to fight their evil doings. Twelve Nordes rom the party are chosen, Ahmed, a Muslim, is picked as the thirteenth. Knowing that defeat is eminent, the 13 warriors must undergo indeterminable odds to battle and rid the land of the horrific flesh eaters.
The 13th Warrior is an epic tour de force created by two of Hollywood's most ingenious: Michael Crichton (JURASSIC PARK, LOOKER) and John McTiernan (PREDATOR, THE LAST ACTION HERO). Its sheer epicness and style make it an astonishing spectacle. Never before has such detail and large scale beauty been present in a Viking film.
| Starring | Antonio Banderas, Diane Venora, Omar Sharif |
|---|---|
| Director | John McTiernan |
| Studio | TOUCHSTONE HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 38 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 08 Jan 2001 Production year: 1999 |
| Format | DVD |
The Vikings gets a gruesome makeover in this horror adventure from director John McTiernan, based on Michael Crichton's novel Eaters of the Dead. Antonio Banderas looks decidedly uncomfortable as a tenth-century Arab emissary abducted by Norsemen to fight barbaric cannibals who are terrorising their compatriots. How the Arab adapts to a totally alien culture and uncovers the secrets of the feared spirits in the mist makes for a visually arresting, if half-baked, saga, though the initially promising fantasy elements soon evaporate into a rather mundane reality. The film is never boring — there are numerous epic battle sequences and graphic scenes of slaughter — but it's not really that exciting either and shows clear signs of production difficulties. Crichton re-edited McTiernan's final cut, reducing Omar Sharif and Diane Venora's roles to virtually nothing despite their top billing. Jerry Goldsmith's marvellously stirring soundtrack is a major plus, however.
Rollicking and gory historical romp, of a kind not seen since The Vikings; despite its claims to be based on fact, it is not to be taken seriously.
Why do people think that this film is not worth watching. looking at the part that banderas plays how would you adapt if you could not speak someones language, give up and say i dont understand? he is an exciled poet, an artist that is thrown into a war that he must find answers to and does, he addapts to fighting for his life and others in doing so earns the respect of the vikings he has been chossen to acompany. the settings and scenery are on par with anything that has been produced for this type of fantasy film. But i do admit some of it was predictable maybee i just like this kind of film
Antonio Banderas plays an arab who is banished from his own land and joins a group of vikings help protect a village from a dark evil. A truely entertaining film all three of my teenagers enjoyed this film so much we went out and bought it.