Dungeons and Dragons: Wrath of The Dragon God
Dungeons and Dragons: Wrath of the Dragon God (also known as Dungeons and Dragons: The Elemental Might) is a 2005 made-for-TV live-action movie set in the Dungeons and Dragons universe. Unlike the Dungeons and Dragons film released in 2000, Wrath of the Dragon God is clearly based upon its source material -- to the point at which it often seems as if its characters are simply explaining various aspects of the Player's Handbook to one another.
3000 years ago, Faluzure, the evil dragon god of decay and undeath, attacked the kingdom of Turan. The Turanian mages (with the help of the god Obadhai) were able to repel Faluzure and imprison him.
100 years ago, the evil mage Damodar - formerly The Dragon to Jeremy Irons' Big Bad in the previous Dungeons and Dragons movie - fought against the people of Izmir and was cursed with a century of suffering as one of the undead. Now Damodar is back. He intends to free Faluzure and take his revenge on Izmir.
A third D&D movie, Dungeons & Dragons: The Book of Vile Darkness, was released in November 2012. Hardly anyone noticed or cared.
- Anticlimax Boss: Both times they fight him, our heroes have no trouble beating Damodar in physical combat.
- Well he is a wizard. They beat him in combat both times by being physical, which wouldn't really be a wizard's strength.
- He was a fighter in the previous movie... His loss of that skill makes him quite an anticlimax.
- He is a century out of training.
- He was a fighter in the previous movie... His loss of that skill makes him quite an anticlimax.
- Well he is a wizard. They beat him in combat both times by being physical, which wouldn't really be a wizard's strength.
- Anyone Can Die
- Arrogant Kung Fu Guy: Ormaline the elf wizard displays a sort of arrogance typically seen in more physical combatants.
- Avengers Assemble
- Berserk Button: Don't talk about Lux's brother. Appropriately enough, they're both actually berserkers. Her brother was killed prior to the events of the film because he couldn't keep his rage in check.
- The Berserker: Lux.
- Big Bad: Faluzure.
- Body Horror: Melora spends most of the movie rotting from the outside in after being cursed by Damodar. Eww.
- Break the Haughty: If facial expressions are anything to go by, this happens to Lux in the Goblin town. At first, she is completely annoyed and unconvinced when Nim stops her from activating what he claims is a trap. When, he reveals that it actually was a trap, she's more or less floored.
- Camp Gay: Damodar comes off as this in his more subdued scenes.
- Cast as a Mask: Klaxx disguised as the old mage
- Less Cast as a Mask since Oberon was a separate character that Klaxx killed and disguised himself as.
- Character Alignment:
- Lawful Good: Berek.
- Chaotic Good: Lux and Nim.
- True Neutral: Dorian and Ormaline.
- Neutral Good: Melora.
- Conspicuous CG
- Covers Always Lie: The dragon on the cover is not the titular dragon god, but an ice dragon the band meet at the halfway point. Also, the foreground shows multiple dragons attacking the city when Faluzure does this by himself in the actual movie.
- The Dragon: Damodar, not Faluzure, who really is a dragon.
- Dungeon Crawling: Quite possibly the best part of the movie.
- DVD Commentary: One of the MST variety, done by actors pretending to be 3 iconic D&D characters: Lidda, Krusk, and Jozan.
- Evil Is Not a Toy: Subverted/Averted Faluzure seems quite amicable to his releaser. Although since Damodar had released him from thousands of years of imprisonment, you can assume he'd probably be grateful. Plus, Damodar said that he wished to rule over Izmir "As your thrall", meaning that despite freeing him, he still acknowledged Faluzure as his master and better.
- Facial Markings: Dorian has some bitchin' racing stripes on his face. Lux's facial tattoo is much more tasteful, by comparison.
- Five-Man Band: The party fits just about perfectly into the following roles.
- The Hero: Berek.
- The Lancer: Ormaline.
- The Big Guy: Lux.
- The Smart Guy: Nim.
- The Chick: Dorian.
- Ghost Town
- High Fantasy: Would be Heroic Fantasy except that the Big Bad has to be defeated with the orb instead of through any kind of combat skills.
- Hobbits: According to Word of God and All in The Manual, Nim is a halfling even though he is only a little shorter than everyone else.
- Maybe he's only half-halfling?
- A quarterling.
- Maybe he's only half-halfling?
- Hot Amazon: Lux.
- Lampshaded with a small conversation between Berek and a bedridden Melora.
Melora: The barbarian is very beautiful.
Berek: You know she was called for her skill in battle, not her looks.
Melora: So you agree she is beautiful.
- Jerkass: Nim.
- I Owe You My Life
- Karma Houdini: The lich Klaxx, who flees when trouble begins brewing.
- Kill and Replace: Klaxx does this to Oberon
- Large Ham: Everyone has their moments, but Damodar is king of the ham heap with Lux coming in at a close second.
- Literally Shattered Lives: Dorian, although he was supposed to have returned in the now-cancelled spinoff show.
- Mr. Exposition: Damodar.
- Never My Fault: Once Damodar makes the conditions of his undead curse clear, he abruptly growls that he did not fail Profion; he simply died before Profion could lift the curse.
- Putting the Band Back Together: Berek knows most of the party from previous adventures and requests their aid specifically.
- Sacrificial Lion: Dorian.
- Samus Is a Girl: Lux's introductory scene fools the viewer into believing the barbarian they're talking about is another character - until she knocks said character out with a punch to the head.
- Screw This, I'm Outta Here
- Klaxx.
- Nim and Ormaline are forced to do this due to near fatal injuries
- Sealed Evil in a Can: Faluzure.
- Ship Tease: Lux and Nim, with a hint of Slap Slap Kiss.
- Tele Frag: Due to an unfortunate flaw built into the pool of sight, Malek died by teleporting himself directly into a wall. Later, Ormaline does the same thing, but only loses an arm in the process.
- Token Evil Teammate: Nim, who is officially stated to be Chaotic Good but comes across as Chaotic Neutral at best. His introductory scene has him nonchalantly tricking a couple of fellow thieves into triggering a trap that roasts them alive, after which Nim steals their stuff.
- Two Lines, No Waiting: The heroes' quest and the events back home. Actually not too badly done.
- You Shall Not Pass: Lux, near the end. Subverted - she survives and pops up again to help Berek during the final battle.