Quest for the Mighty Sword

Last updated
Quest for the Mighty Sword
Ator 4 poster.jpg
British home video cover
Directed by Joe D'Amato
Screenplay byJoe D'Amato [1]
Produced byCarlo Maria Cordio [1]
Starring
CinematographyJoe D'Amato [1]
Edited byKathleen Stratton [1]
Music byCarlo Maria Cordio [1]
Production
company
Filmirage [2]
Release date
  • 29 August 1990 (1990-08-29)(United States)
Running time
94 minutes (United States) [3]
CountryItaly [1]

Quest for the Mighty Sword (also known as Ator III: The Hobgoblin, The Hobgoblin, or Troll 3) is a 1990 Italian fantasy adventure film directed by Joe D'Amato. It is the fourth and final film in the Ator film series. [2]

Contents

Plot

Thorn, King of the Gods, gave the Sword of the Sacred Graal to Ator, King of the Akili, to bring justice to his people and lead them back to their home in the Middle World. When Thorn comes to reclaim it, Ator refuses to give it back because he wants to pass it on to his little son Ator. Dejanira, an immortal, arrives in time to plead for Ator's life. Nonetheless, Thorn kills Ator, splitting the sword in two, and orders Dejanira to be imprisoned in a circle of fire until a human arrives who is strong enough to free her, at which point she will lose her immortality.

Young Ator's mother Sunn places him and the sword fragments in the care of the ugly sorcerer gnome Grindel and asks him for a death potion. Giving her a love potion instead, Grindel sleeps with her and curses her to lead a life of eternal poverty and prostitution until a man comes who embraces her like a mother.

Years later, when young Ator is about to turn 18, the soothsayer Nephele shows him a vision of Dejanira, with whom Ator falls in love, and tells him of his destiny. Ator finds the sword fragments hidden in Grindel's cave, forges them together and kills the gnome with it.

Following Nephele's instructions, Ator first travels to the Western Kingdom, where he enters a cave to defeat deadly robotic warrior twins and a fire-breathing dragon, after which he sacrifices the cave's treasure to the Gods. In another cave, he finds and frees Dejanira, which rouses Thorn's anger, who makes a volcano erupt and the cave collapse.

In a tavern, Ator meets his mother and, without recognising her, rescues her from an abusive client. When she recognises him and falls into his embrace, Grindel's curse is lifted and she immediately turns old in his arms and dies.

After burning her body, Ator continues his quest for his people and the Middle World by travelling through the Eastern Kingdom, where he and Dejanira confront the treachery of King Gunther and his sister Grimilde.

Cast

Production

Actress Marisa Mell returned to the screen in this film after a five years absence. [4] The film re-used some of the goblin masks from Troll 2 . [5]

The film bears similarities to Der Ring des Nibelungen . [6] Ator is the equivalent of Siegfried, raised and abused by Mime (Grindel), who gets the magic sword Notung (The Sword of the Sacred Graal) and frees the sleeping warrior maiden Brünhilde (Dejanira) from a circle of fire. The last act of the film with the evil king and his gnomish advisor is similar to the last opera of the cycle, with the characters Gunther, his sister Grimhilde and Hagen even retaining their names from the opera, though unlike the opera, Quest for the Mighty Sword does not end with the hero's death.

Release

In the United States, Quest for the Mighty Sword was released direct-to-video on August 29, 1990. [1] [7]

The film was also released as Ator III: The Hobgoblin, The Hobgoblin, and in Germany as Troll 3 (German release title). [5] [8] D'Amato personally referred to the film as The Lord of Akili in a 1996 interview. [9]

Reception

John Stanley called the film "[a]nother pathetic entry in the Italian-produced Ator series". [10] Keith Bailey gave it a rating of one out of five stars, categorising it as "so bad it's good", with reservations due to some "dull moments". He wrote that the film's hero "manages to avoid spaghetti sauce lava when not fighting Siamese-twin robots and mucus-covered Godzilla clones in a quest that really doesn't seem to have any specific goal" and thus grants that "there are some hilariously bad sequences that will please fans of the abysmal". [11]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joe D'Amato</span> Italian film director

Aristide Massaccesi, known professionally as Joe D'Amato, was an Italian film director, producer, cinematographer, and screenwriter who worked in many genres but is best known for his horror, erotic and adult films.

Ator refers to a film series of four Italian movies made in the 1980s by director Joe D'Amato under the pseudonym David Hills. D'Amato wrote and directed the first, second, and fourth films in the series, himself disregarding the existence of the third. The character of Ator was played in the first three films by Miles O'Keeffe, while Eric Allan Kramer played the Son of Ator in the fourth.

<i>Ator 2 – Linvincibile Orion</i> 1982 Italian film

Ator 2 – L'invincibile Orion, a.k.a. English title: The Blade Master) is a 1982 Italian sword-and-sandal film directed by Joe D'Amato, and starring Miles O'Keeffe as Ator, Charles Borromel as Akronos, Lisa Foster as Mila, the daughter of Akronos, and David Brandon as Zor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marisa Mell</span> Austrian actress

Marisa Mell was an Austrian actress. Typecast as a femme fatale in European arthouse and genre films, she is best regarded for her performances as Eva Kant in Mario Bava's critically re-assessed Danger: Diabolik (1968), and the dual role of Susan Dumurrier/Monica Weston in Lucio Fulci's gialloOne on Top of the Other (1969).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Eastman (actor)</span> Italian actor and screenwriter

George Eastman is an Italian actor and screenwriter well known for his frequent collaborations with notorious director Joe D'Amato. He is most famous for his role as the insane, cannibalistic serial killer Klaus Wortmann in the gory 1980 horror film Antropophagus. He also played a similar role in its 1981 follow-up, Absurd. Both films were directed by D'Amato and written by Eastman.

<i>Troll</i> (film) 1986 American comedy horror film

Troll is a 1986 American horror comedy film directed by John Carl Buechler and produced by Charles Band of Empire Pictures, starring Noah Hathaway, Michael Moriarty, Shelley Hack, Jenny Beck, and Sonny Bono.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Umberto Lenzi</span> Italian director and writer (1931–2017)

Umberto Lenzi was an Italian film director, screenwriter, and novelist.

<i>Hercules in the Haunted World</i> 1961 film by Mario Bava

Hercules in the Haunted World is a 1961 Italian sword-and-sandal film directed by Mario Bava. British bodybuilder Reg Park plays Hercules while British actor Christopher Lee appears as Hercules' nemesis Lico. Shooting at Cinecittà, director Mario Bava used some of the same sets from the earlier Hercules and the Conquest of Atlantis which also stars Park.

<i>The Adventures of Hercules</i> 1985 film

The Adventures of Hercules is the 1985 sequel to the 1983 film Hercules. It was written and directed by Luigi Cozzi and has bodybuilder-turned-actor Lou Ferrigno reprising his role as the title character.

<i>Ator, the Fighting Eagle</i> 1982 film by Joe DAmato

Ator, the Fighting Eagle is a 1982 Italian adventure-fantasy film directed by Joe D'Amato, and the first film to feature the character Ator.

<i>Iron Warrior</i> 1987 Italian film

Iron Warrior is 1987 film directed by Alfonso Brescia.

<i>Goliath and the Dragon</i> 1960 film

Goliath and the Dragon is a 1960 international co-production sword-and-sandal film starring Mark Forest and Broderick Crawford. The name of the main character was changed from Hercules to Emilius for release in North America by American International Pictures to sell it as a sequel to their earlier Goliath and the Barbarians (1959).

<i>Goliath and the Vampires</i> 1961 film

Goliath and the Vampires is a 1961 Italian peplum film directed by Sergio Corbucci and Giacomo Gentilomo.

<i>Samson and the Slave Queen</i> 1962 film

Samson and the Slave Queen is a 1963 Italian peplum directed by Umberto Lenzi. It was originally made as a Maciste film in Italy, in which the fabled strongman meets Zorro. It was redubbed into a "Samson" movie for distribution in the U.S. and "Samson" meets "El Toro"

<i>Nero and the Burning of Rome</i> 1953 film by Primo Zeglio

Nero and the Burning of Rome is a 1953 Italian epic historical drama film directed by Primo Zeglio and loosely based on real life events of Roman emperor Nero. It was based on the novel Nerone e Messalina (c.1949) by Harry Bluhmen.

<i>The Sword of the Barbarians</i> 1982 film

The Sword of the Barbarians is a 1982 sword and sorcery film written and directed by Michele Massimo Tarantini and starring Peter McCoy and Sabrina Siani. The film is also known as Barbarian Master and Thor the Horrible. The village raid scene in this film was re-used a year later in The Throne of Fire (1983).

<i>The Dragons Blood</i> 1957 Italian film

The Dragon's Blood is a 1957 Italian fantasy film co-written and directed by Giacomo Gentilomo. It is based on Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen.

Gladiators 7 is a 1962 film directed by Pedro Lazaga. The film has several elements from Akira Kurosawa's film The Seven Samurai.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bella Cortez</span> Cuban actress and dancer

Bella Cortez is a Cuban actress and dancer known for her work in Italian sword-and-sandal films of the 1960s.

<i>Le schiave di Cartagine</i> Film

The Sword and the cross is a 1956 sword and sandal film directed by Guido Brignone starring Gianna Maria Canale, Jorge Mistral, Marisa Allasio and Ana Luisa Peluffo. The film, a coproduction between Italy, Spain, and Mexico, was and shot in widescreen (Cinetotalscope) in Italian in Cinecittà, Rome.

References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kinnard & Crnkovich 2017, p. 202.
  2. 1 2 Kinnard & Crnkovich 2017, p. 203.
  3. Staff, Bowker Editorial (2001). Bowker's Complete Video Directory 2001. Bowker. ISBN   9780835244220 . Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  4. Schneider, André (2013). Die Feuerblume: Über Marisa Mell und ihre Filme (in German). Books on Demand. p. 195. ISBN   9783732275151 . Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  5. 1 2 Collis, Clark (May 8, 2010). "The 'Troll' trilogy: Is this really the 'Best Worst' movie franchise of all time?". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved June 7, 2019.
  6. Glaser, Ed (7 March 2022). How the World Remade Hollywood: Global Interpretations of 65 Iconic Films. McFarland. p. 16. ISBN   978-1-4766-4467-7.
  7. Armstrong, Richard B.; Armstrong, Mary Willems (2015). Encyclopedia of Film Themes, Settings and Series. McFarland. ISBN   9781476612300 . Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  8. Rushing 2016, p. 187.
  9. Palmerini & Mistretta 1996, p. 80.
  10. Stanley, John (2000). Creature Features: The Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Movie Guide. Berkley Boulevard Books. p. 422. ISBN   9780425175170 . Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  11. Bailey, Keith. "Quest for the Mighty Sword – review | cast and crew, movie star rating and where to watch film on TV and online". Radio Times. Retrieved 10 March 2019.

Sources