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Season of the Witch is a 2011 American supernatural action-adventure film starring Nicolas Cage and Ron Perlman, and directed by Dominic Sena. Cage and Perlman star as Teutonic Knights who return from the Crusades to find their homeland devastated by the Black Death. Two church elders accuse a young woman (Claire Foy) of being a witch responsible for the plague. They command the two knights to transport her to a distant monastery so the monks can lift her curse. The film reunited Sena and Cage, who had previously worked together on Gone in 60 Seconds.
Development on the film began in 2000 when the spec script by screenwriter Bragi F. Schut was purchased by MGM. The project moved from MGM to Columbia Pictures to Relativity Media, where the film was finally produced by Charles Roven and Alex Gartner. Filming took place primarily in Austria, Hungary, and Croatia. Season of the Witch was released on January 7, 2011, in the United States, Canada, and several other territories.
Plot
This article s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (January 2023)
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In Villach in the 13th century, three women are accused by a priest of witchcraft. The first confesses in an attempt to earn mercy. The second claims she made ointments but not magic potions. The third, a hag with a blind eye, does not deny the charge and curses the priest. All three are first hanged and then drowned. The priest pulls the three hanged corpses from the water for a religious ritual so they can never return to life. The priest performs the ritual on each using The Key of Solomon. The first shows no sign of life. The hag s body vomits and twitches violently. The third corpse, the woman who had claimed to be an ointment maker, takes on a demonic appearance, sets the book on fire, and hangs the priest.
In the 14th century, German Teutonic Knights Sir Behmen von Bleibruck and Sir Felson join crusades throughout the 1330s (1332 Gulf of Edremit, 1334 Siege of Tripoli, 1337 Imbros, and 1339 Artah), eventually joining the Smyrniote crusades. After witnessing a civilian massacre during the 1344 capture of Smyrna, the two abandon their knightly order and return to Austria.
Traveling through Styria in Austria, Behmen and Felson encounter the sight of those infected with the Black Death, learning that the plague has swept the Holy Roman Empire. Trying to conceal their identities as deserters, Behmen s known sword crest reveals that they are crusader knights. They are arrested and taken to Cardinal D Ambroise, who is near death from the plague. The Cardinal asks the knights to escort an alleged witch, suspected of causing the pestilence, to a remote monastery, where a group of monks can determine if she is truly a witch. If found guilty, they can perform a sacred ritual to cancel her powers and stop the plague. Both knights agree under the condition that she be given a fair trial and the charges of desertion against them be dropped. The Cardinal agrees, and they are accompanied by the priest Debelzaq; the altar boy, Kay von Wollenbarth, who wants to become a knight like his deceased father; another knight, Sir Johann Eckhardt, whose family was killed by the Black Death; finally, Hagamar, a well-traveled swindler, who will serve as their guide in return for his pardon. The young woman Anna from Marburg shows hatred towards Debelzaq, while forming a connection with Behmen.
The group camp for the night and Johann takes first watch. When Debelzaq comes to relieve him, Johann says how much she reminds him of his dead daughter. He then goes on to speak of the ritual politics of her coming trial and how she can never be found not guilty by the Church with a plague curse everywhere. Johann decides to give up the mission and to convince the others to do the same, leaving Anna alone with Debelzaq. Anna becomes hysterical at the prospect of being left with him. She attacks and grabs his key to her cage and escapes. The search for her leads the group to a mass grave, where Johann begins having visions of his dead daughter calling to him. Chasing those visions, he accidentally impales himself on Kay s drawn sword and dies. When Anna is recaptured, the tearful young woman explains that she only ran away for fear of Debelzaq. They cross an old, crumbling suspension bridge, where Anna saves Kay from falling, grabbing him with unnatural strength. The group enters the dark forest, Wormwood, where Hagamar attempts to kill Anna, only to be stopped by the others. Anna appears to summon packs of wolves, which chase the group and kill Hagamar. An enraged Behmen tries to kill her but is stopped by Debelzaq and Felson, who point to their destination on a nearby summit.
At the monastery, the men discover that all the monks have succumbed to the plague. They locate the ancient volume, The Key of Solomon, filled with the holy rituals used to defeat evil. Debelzaq begins speaking the ritual used on witches. In a deep voice, Anna begins recounting Behmen s horror of Crusader cruelties, just as Debelzaq realizes that she is not a witch, but has been possessed by a demon. He frantically performs an exorcism. The demon that is possessing Anna finally reveals its form and melts the cage s metal, escaping, while fighting off the knights. When Debelzaq throws a container of holy water on it, the demon flies screeching out of sight. As the men search for it, they realize it is not trying to escape, but to destroy the book so that nothing can kill it. They find a room where the monks were making copies for others to use. The demon destroys the copies and possesses the dead monks to use as weapons. The three men fight the monks possessed corpses, as Debelzaq continues the exorcism ritual. The demon snaps Debelzaq s neck and incinerates Felson. Kay continues the ritual, weakening it. Behmen fights the demon and is mortally wounded by it. Kay finishes the ritual, and the demon is consumed by holy fire. Behmen asks Kay to keep Anna safe just before she dies. After their fallen friends are buried, Anna asks Kay to tell her about the men who saved her. They both leave the monastery, the Book of Solomon safely in Kay s possession for mankind to use against the forces of evil.
Cast
- Nicolas Cage as Behmen
- Ron Perlman as Felson
- Stephen Campbell Moore as Debelzaq
- Claire Foy as the girl (Anna)
- Stephen Graham as Hagamar
- Ulrich Thomsen as Eckhardt
- Robert Sheehan as Kay
- Christopher Lee as Cardinal D Ambroise
Production
Development and filming
Screenwriter Bragi F. Schut wrote Season of the Witch as a spec script; in 2003, the script won Schut the Nicholl Fellowship, the single most prestigious award for an unproduced screenplay. The script was placed on the open market in 2000. Numerous studios bid on the script, and producers Charles Roven and Alex Gartner collaborated with the studio MGM to place a winning bid. MGM could not find traction to produce the film, and in 2003–2004 the studio was essentially obtained by a number of concerns . Columbia Pictures earmarked several properties for themselves, including Season of the Witch. The producers worked with director Dominic Sena to perform location shooting throughout Europe. They sought a 14th-century castle to use as a setting for the story; castles visited in Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic could not fit the period. With the film yet to be produced, the project eventually moved to Relativity Media, and Sena was officially attached to direct. Business and creative discussions led to avoiding too much violence or gore in the film so a broader audience could see it. Actor Nicolas Cage was considered for the starring role but was unavailable during the time of the location shooting. Cage eventually became available in 2008 and was cast in the role. He explained his interest, I wanted to make movies that celebrated actors like Christopher Lee and Vincent Price, and the great Roger Corman classics that are unafraid to explore the paranormal and the supernatural.
The crew began production immediately after Cage finished Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (2009). The film had a budget of approximately US$40 million, and much of the budget was covered by Relativity with pre-sales to distributors outside the United States. Filming took place in Austria, Hungary and Croatia. Most of the principal photography took place in practical locations, with several days committed to filming on greenscreen. Scenes were filmed at Burg Kreuzenstein and on the Loser mountain. Principal photography was completed by April 2009, but the cast and crew re-gathered a few months later to film additional battle sequences, filming on greenscreen to save on travel.
Casting
Cage stars as Behman of Bleibruck, a Teutonic knight who returns from the Crusades to discover the devastation caused by the Black Plague. The actor had worked with director Dominic Sena on Gone in 60 Seconds (2000) and with producer Charles Roven on City of Angels (1998). Cage was interested in the film s fantastical subject matter, also having recently starred in The Sorcerer s Apprentice. He also described Behmen as the first conscientious objector, saying, I admired… the idea of him breaking from whatever religious propaganda was forced upon him, and still finding an even closer connection with his faith and with God. Those iconoclastic elements to the character made him very interesting to me. For the role, Cage learned horseback riding from Camilla Naprous and her team of horse trainers in England. Cage also worked with a fight choreographer to learn swordfighting.
Perlman plays Felson, a knight who is Behmen s best friend and fellow combatant during the Crusades. Perlman said of choosing the role, I love the character. I m actually more comfortable being a sidekick, because I don t get blamed if it is a complete disaster. I really liked … his mindset, I liked his irreverence. In the world of seriousness, he s a guy who thinks it s all bullshit. He s just in it for the whores and the sword fights. Perlman described Felson s religion, Whereas Behmen has a very well-articulated idea of his relationship to country and church and spirituality and God, Felson has none. He doesn t bother to spend any time thinking about that.
Foy appears in her feature-film debut as the young woman who is accused of being a witch. Known for her titular role in the British miniseries Little Dorrit, she met Sena and sought the role in Season of the Witch. She explained the choice, It s quite a manipulative role. The character does a lot of manipulating, pitting other people against each other, being quite mischievous… That was something I thought would obviously be good to do . Foy researched witchcraft and demonic possession for the role. She described its appeal, Playing a character that was making things happen, and mainly in control of an entire group of men. And for once, be the character that is completely in the know about everything. There is nothing that she doesn t know. Nothing is a surprise. And she is able to deal with every single situation that arises the way that she sees fit. And I think that was quite refreshing to be able to play a character that wasn t entirely beholden to everyone else .
Visual effects
For Season of the Witch, Tippett Studio designed the demon that manifests in the film s denouement. The art directors researched woodcuts and other artwork for classic demonic appearances. The filmmakers requested an entity lithe and feminine , and the visual effects crew designed a demon that had cloven feet, a dog ankle, and a fawn leg . Designing visual effects for the demon s wings was the biggest challenge since wings tend to get in the way or do not move convincingly. The filmmakers also requested holes in the demon s wings. The crew designed holes that appeared worn instead of ripped, since ripped holes would require an added billowing effect.
The demon was also designed to have dark gray skin, which presented the crew a challenge in the film s dark settings. Tippett s Blair Clark said, We played the skin like a rotten mummy: nothing too moist, with a lot of wear marks on it . The crew s final visual effects shot was the death of the demon, and they researched previous films and terminology for how demons deaths have been designed. They drew inspiration from Hellboy (2004), where they focused on the buildup to the demon s death. Clark said, We built it over a series of shots so it doesn t just happen in one shot. We had little patches on the demon that start to crack and result in a glow that looks like it s burning from within .
Release
Lionsgate scheduled Season of the Witch to be released on March 19, 2010, but five weeks before the date, the studio decided to pull the film from release. Lionsgate originally had an output deal with Relativity Media, but since Relativity had formed its own marketing and distribution arm in 2010, Relativity chose to release the film themselves and in October 2010 the film was pushed back a year from its original release date of March 19, 2010 to January 7, 2011. Season of the Witch was Relativity s first inhouse production.
Season of the Witch in January 2010 had been rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America, citing thematic elements, violence, and disturbing content . The studio edited the film and re-submitted it to the MPAA in November 2010 for a new rating. The MPAA gave the film the same rating and reason for it as before.
The film had its world premiere in New York City on January 4, 2011. The film was released commercially on January 7, 2011 in several territories. Pre-release polling had indicated young men were the core demographic for the film, though more women than expected expressed interest in the film. Experts anticipated that the film would gross US$10–12 million on its opening weekend in the United States and Canada. The film was released in 2,816 theaters in the two territories. It grossed $10.6 million, ranking third at the box office after True Grit and Little Fockers, which were both released at the end of 2010. Relativity Media s exit polling showed that the audience was 52% male and that 61% were 25 years old and up. The Los Angeles Times reported that an unusually high 69% of the audience was nonwhite. Entertainment Weekly noted that the racial diversity of Season of the Witch s audiences was common for supernatural thrillers; the breakdown was 36% Hispanic, 31% Caucasian, 14% Asian, 10% African-American, and 9% other . The film was the second release by Relativity and performed better than its first release, The Warrior s Way (2010). The opening weekend was not the lowest of Nicolas Cage s career to that point; it was better than The Wicker Man (2006), Next (2007) and Bangkok Dangerous (2008).
Home media
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment (under a new output license deal with Relativity) released the film on DVD and Blu-ray on June 28, 2011. 20th Television holds pay-per-view, on-demand, and television rights to this film under Fox s new deal with Relativity/Rogue.
Reception
Box office
Season of the Witch grossed $24.8 million in the United States and Canada and $66.8 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $91.6 million.
Critical response
Season of the Witch received mostly negative reviews. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 11%, based on 125 reviews, with an average rating of 3.80/10. The site s consensus reads, Slow, cheap-looking, and dull, Season of the Witch fails even as unintentional comedy . Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 28 out of 100, based on 27 critics, indicating generally unfavorable reviews . Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of C+ on an A+ to F scale.
Associated Press film critic Christy Lemire called Season of the Witch a supernatural action thriller that s never actually thrilling and added that the scenery is drab, the battles are interchangeable, and no one seems particularly interested in being here . According to the Los Angeles Times, critics said that Cage was the primary reason that this swords-and-sorcery romp is a collosal waste of time . Andrew Barker of Variety said Season of the Witch was both overblown and undercooked and thought the film would have been more fun if it had a sense of humor. He called the film too inert for midnight-movie schadenfreudists, and not nearly competent enough for even the most forgiving of fantasy fans . Of the film s production value, he said, Witch s photography, costumes and production design are of good quality; editing, scoring and visual effects are most decidedly not . Tom Huddleston of Time Out London wrote, Despite its admirably straight face, Season of the Witch is a silly romp through Pythonesque medieval cliché and knockabout Hammer horror with a dash of cut-price Tolkien chucked in to keep things moving . Huddleston criticized Cage s performance but praised Perlman s. The critic concluded, Season of the Witch is not for everyone: it’s creaky, predictable and frequently idiotic. But for a tipsy Saturday night, this should tick all the right boxes .
Writing for The Observer, Mark Kermode described it as like a cross between Michael Reeves s brilliant Witchfinder General and Renny Harlin s abysmal Exorcist: The Beginning, with a fair (if unintentional) sprinkling of Monty Python and the Holy Grail thrown in for good measure… It s all utter balderdash from start to finish, with everyone sporting terrible period haircuts, and characters appearing and disappearing in a manner which suggests that the editors minds were on other things; namely, the big finale which is, sadly, a bit rubbish . Salon s Andrew O Hehir thought the film resembles a Hollywood-by-way-of-Hungary remake of Ingmar Bergman s The Seventh Seal filtered through the B-movie aesthetic of, say, Roger Corman . O Hehir wrote, Season of the Witch is an unremitting schlockfest, full of blood and filth, bloated, purulent corpses, ghastly one-eyed witches and undead monks. If there were more such Corman-esque thrills and chills, and a whole bunch less ponderous Bergman references, we d all be better off .
The film earned a Razzie Award nomination for Nicolas Cage as Worst Actor, but lost to Adam Sandler for Jack and Jill and Just Go with It.
Year | 2011 |
ReleaseDate | 2011-01-07 |
RuntimeMins | 95 |
RuntimeStr | 1h 35min |
Plot | 14th-century knights transport a suspected witch to a monastery, where monks deduce that her powers could be the source of the Black Plague. |
Awards | Awards, 2 nominations |
Directors | Dominic Sena |
Writers | Bragi F. Schut |
Stars | Nicolas Cage, Ron Perlman, Claire Foy |
Produced by | Steve Alexander, Gloria Fan, Alex Gartner, Alan Glazer, Tom Karnowski, Ryan Kavanaugh, Charles Roven, Tucker Tooley |
Music by | Atli Örvarsson |
Cinematography by | Amir Mokri |
Film Editing by | Bob Ducsay, Mark Helfrich, Dan Zimmerman |
Casting By | Elaine Grainger |
Production Design by | Uli Hanisch |
Art Direction by | Bence Erdelyi, Kai Koch, Tibor Lázár, Gabriella Simon |
Set Decoration by | Monica Rottmeyer |
Costume Design by | Carlo Poggioli |
Makeup Department | Márta Antal, Allan A. Apone, Laszlo Balogh, Fruzsina Banhalmi, Timothy Blackburn, Csilla Blake-Horváth, Matyas Borda, Erica Brunson, Szandra Bíró, Csaba Böjthe, Ricardo Contreras, Zsolt Egressy, Krisztina Fehér, Rita Fekete, Balint Feledy, Judit Halász, Ilona Herman, Katalin Jakots, Nóra Kapás, Krystal Kershaw, Gergö Lengyel, Courtney Lether, Tünde Méhész, Vera Naval, Gabriella Németh, Iván Pohárnok, James Rolan, Tamas Savanya, Aileen Seaton, Tommie Strawther, Sándor Ferenc Szabó, Attila Tillinger, Amy C. Weinberg, Crystal Woodford |
Production Management | Vaclav Eisenhamer, Ken Halsband, Jason Hewitt, James K. Jensen, Tom Karnowski, Felicián Keresztes, Krisztian Kertai, Oak Porcelli, Richard Sharkey, Marcell Szabó, Miklós Tóth, Gábor Ujházy |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | Vic Armstrong, Krisztina Barkóczy, Andi Budman, Tamás Péter Chipie, James M. Freitag, Gergely Fülöp, János György, Martina Götthansova, Mark Helfrich, Liza Kozma, Steve Lonano, Tamas Lukacs, Kati Magenheim, Tommy Martin, Bogi Móricz, Craig A. Pinckes, Zsolt Páll, Tom Struthers, Réka Szabó |
Art Department | Csaba Bagossy, Szedlacsek Balazs, István Balogh, Roxana A. Balogh, Brian Garrett Brigham, Zoltán Bus, Daniel Coe, Ricardo Contreras, Christian Cordella, Pál Csicsman, Gábor Csiki, Gergely Dömölki, Dan Fraga, Jeffrey Pratt Gordon, Nimrod Hajdu, Todd Harris, Mike Herriage, Kathleen Kat Holton, Sam Jacobs, John Jarhead Gorman, Gergely Kajdi, Andrea Kessler, Zsuzsa Kismarty-Lechner, József Kiss, Sebastian Csaba Kiss, Thorsten Klein, Zoltán Kohut, Magdi Kondorosi, Máté Kovácsi, Jaroslaw Kozak, April LaBranche, Csaba Lodi, Kay McGlone, Alexandra Miklos, Csaba Mitku, Mihály Molnár, Christopher Lee Moore, Norbert Nagy, László Nagyidai Jr., Zsolt Nemes, William Nutt, Zsolt Nyerges, Marybeth O Connor, Szabolcs-Levente Olvedi, Tamas Ordodi, Annamária Orosz, Kovacs Peter, Beatrix Petõ, Jack Reeves, Hannah May Roark, Zsolt Sajgó, John Eric Seay, Zalan Sipos, Karolina Slemer, Alexander Sasha Stolin, Gábor Szabó, Géza Szabó, Lajos E. Szabó, Zoltán Szalkai, Krisztina Szilágyi, László Szirmai, Barbara Szlávik, Krisztina Szücsy, Oláh Sándor Alexander, Villõ Turcsány, Vilmos Törköly, Kurt van der Basch, Judit Varga, Jason Wilson, Ali A. Ádám |
Sound Department | Steve C. Aaron, Christopher Assells, Ron Bedrosian, Beau Borders, Julio Carmona, Nick Foley, Scott Martin Gershin, Michael Hertlein, Adam Horley, Daniel S. Irwin, Darren Jones, Simon Jones, Tamas Kurina, Brad Lokey, Jacob Mathew Drewett, György Mihályi, Scott Millan, Andrew Morgado, James Moriana, Kevin O Connell, David Parker, Margit Pfeiffer, Shannon Potter, Stuart Provine, Stephen P. Robinson, Mac Ruth, Steve Schatz, Peter Schulteisz, Danial Shimiaei, David Stanke, Greg Steele, Becky Sullivan, Pál Szûrös, Tami Treadwell, Brett Voss, Drew Webster, Jeffrey Wilhoit, Scott Wolf, Greg Zimmerman, Peter Zinda |
Special Effects by | Jason Babin, Andras Billinger, Zsolt Bolcskey, Michael Cantrell, Michael H. Clark, Sam Conway, Furedi Csaba, Norbert Csontos, Csaba László Eröss, Bence Füredi, Hermann Gabor, Chris Giles, István Gittinger, Szilvassy Istvan, Gyula Krasnyánszky, Zoltan Kvassay, Antal Lapp, Jack Lynch, Norbert Orosz, Szilvia Paros, Richard E. Perry, Paul Stephenson, Gyula Szabo, Mark White, Kvassay Zoltan, Attila Érczkövi, Sarolta Vegh |
Visual Effects by | Nathan Abbot, Robert Alves, Jim Aupperle, Vincent Badia, Eric Baker, Heath Baker, Bara Barova, Ron Barr, Dániel Bartha, Stepanakert Batousek, Jerome Berglund, Patrik Bergman, Renee Binkowski, Kristen Borges, Aharon Bourland, Devin Breese, Hans Brekke, James W. Brown, Jan Brukner, John Bruno, Ondrej Bystry, Howard R. Campbell, Shelley Campbell, Michal Cavoj, Jaroslava Chalasova, Ryan Chavez, Fiona Chilton, Jeremy Cho, Blair Clark, Ashton Couch, Pavel Cucka, Robert Cvengros, Dennis Dallen, Kevin Del Colle, Ales Dlabac, Martin Dolezal, David Drbal, Mark Dubeau, Mario Dubec, Daniel Durao, Martin Dusek, Petr Dvorak, Radek Dvorak, Colin Epstein, Marc Estrada, Blanka Faitova, Tamás Fiedler, Q Fortier, Page Frakes, Nate Fredenburg, Roland Friedrich, Miro Gal, Ales Gargulak, Shannon Gerardin, Tyler Gooden, Ivan Grozev, Dave Gutman, Lee Hahn, Tomas Hajek, Vlastimil Hajek, Chris M. Halstead, Joseph Hamdorf, Andy Hass, Petr Hastík, Adam Hazard, Lukas Herrmann, Jan Heusler, Zuzana Hlavkova, Ondrej Hosek, Adam Howard, Zdenek Hrazdira, Martin Hromadko, Lukas Hytych, Amanda Instone, Vajda István, Dalibor Janda, Jakub Jarova, Jan Jinda, Michael Johnson, Louis Jones, Kirk Jung, Jana Jurnickova, Tomas Kalhous, Ales Killian, Jin Yong Kim, SeungJang Jack Kim, Martin Klekner, Pavel Kolar, Vít Komrzý, Lajos Kondor, Jan Konicek, Vsevolod Korovin, Martin Kostun, Vaclav Kostun, Martin Kotrba, István Veress Kovács, Tomas Kral, Nikolay Kravchenko, Frantisek Krejci, Tomas Krejzek, David Kubias, Sanjeev Kumar, Kip Larsen, Mark Laszlo, Eric Leven, Lenka Likarova, Jirí Linhart, David A. Link, Randy Link, Valy Lungoccia, Andy Mac, Jana Macenauerová, Wendy Maestracci, Eric Marko, Eric Markova, Petr Masek, Vladimír Matousek, Jaroslav Matys, Jim McVay, Daniel Melich, Brian Mendenhall, Károly Mesterházy, Jaroslav Minarik, Chris Morley, Jess Morris, Alexandr Muller, Viktor Muller, Christopher Mullins, Tomas Munzar, Ross Nakamura, Marie-Laure Nguyen, Ales Novak, Péter Németh, Andrew Ogawa, Paula Olszowska, Peter Orlicky, Nick Overstreet, Chris Paizis, Blaise Panfalone, Monika Pavlickova, David Pekarek, Robert Pik, Viktor Plch, Katerina Popelova, Matej Pospisil, Jonathan S. Ramos, Satish Ratakonda, Steve Reding, Cory Redmond, Ralph Reinle, Raymond Ribaric, Jules Roman, Nathan Ross, Craig Rowe, Martin Ruizl, Marek Ruth, Ondrej Samohel, Dave Sarbell, David Schnee, Vit Sedlacek, Jiri Siska, Josef Skvrcek, Jan Sladecko, Danny Southard, Nancy St. John, Jiri Stamfest, Frantisek Stepanek, Mirek Suchomel, David Sullivan, Lubos Gerardo Surzin, Letra Svabkova, Michal Sverma, Mátyás Szabó, Atilla Szalma, Attila Szalma, Attila Szapek, Jakub Szilvasi, Pál Tauszig, Michal Teprik, Milan Tofel, Bart Trickel, Martin Trnka, Vladimir Valovic, Jan Vareka, Petr Vcelicka, Frederick B. Vega, Ben Vonzastrow, Kenneth Voss, Jiri Vycital, Ghanshyam Sureshbhai Waghela, Geoff Wheeler, Jeffrey Woo, Lucie Zemanova, Jared Pecht |
Stunts | Keith Adams, Andy Armstrong, James Armstrong, Katie Barnett, Tyler Barnett, Stanton Barrett, Hunter Baxley, Ferenc Berecz, Jennifer Caputo, Alex Chansky, David Cronnelly, Erika Cziráky, Gary Davis, Mark De Alessandro, Mark Dirkse, Balázs Farkas, Sian Farley McBride, Dennis Fitzgerald, Vladimir Furdo Furdik, Kinga Gavalda, Tanner Gill, Zedric Harris, Toby Holguin, Sy Hollands, Lou Horvath, Ashley Nicole Hudson, László Imre, Roman Jankovic, Jesse V. Johnson, Dave Judge, Dennis Keiffer, István Kiss, István Koleszár, Csaba Komondi, Kim Robert Koscki, József Kovalik, Géza Kovács, Balazs Lengyel, Akos Lenkei, Will Leong, Zsolt Viktor Magyari, Mike Mayhall, Kevin McCurdy, J. Travis Merendino, Zoltan Molnar, David M. Morizot, Sean Morrissey, Camilla Naprous, Béla Orsányi, Michael Papajohn, Dóra Papp, Bori Pardanyi, Domonkos Pardanyi, Jan Petrina, Víctor Quintero, Luke Sexton, Tim J. Smith, Tom Struthers, Gáspár Szabó, Mallory Thompson, Jerry Trimble, Tom Waite, Bryon Weiss, Raliegh Wilson, Sterling Winans, Éva Zöld |
Camera and Electrical Department | Tarik Naim Alherimi, László Angyal, Haraszti Balazs, Gábor Balda, Ádám Balogh, Brandon Baudier, Antal Berger, László Bille, Flip Bleekrode, Robert Branam, Wesley Bryant, Kris Butler, Donát Bánkuti, Gary Cadow, Scott Calcagno, Andy Clapp, Bryan DeLorenzo, Krisztián Demeter, Eric DePoorter, Steve István Djuroska, Zoltán Dzsupin, John Gregory Edwards, Rowland Egerton, Egon Endrényi, István Faragó, Dániel Farkas, Zsolt Fehér, Tibor Fejér, Guy Fernandez, Robert Foster, Stephen Fouasnon, Kisgyorgy Gabor, Ingo Gardner, Brad Garris, Gabor Gelegonya, Matthias Gelhausen, David Goldsmith, Gonzalo Gonzalez, Tyler Gooden, István Gottmann, Buda Gulyás, Nándor Gulyás, Tibor Gulyás, Ákos Gulyás, Gergely Hajba, Attila Hevesi, Gábor Hevesi, Richie Hollis, Franklin Jones II, Christopher D. Jones, Tamás Jánossa, Zoltán Jánossa, Róbert Jász, Adam Kalacsi, Ryosuke Kawanaka, Gusztáv Kirsch, János Kiss, Zoltán Gecco Kristóffy, Zoltán Lakatos, Richard Landry, Kevin Lippincott, Scott Luttrell, Alan Markfield, John Marzano, Bruce McCleery, Jerome Miller Jr., István Ménkü, Zsolt Big Nagy, Charlie Nauman, Csaba Nemesházi, Péter Nádai, Robert Owen, Joseph Paolucci Jr., Myron Parran, Max Patrucco, Nancy Piraquive, Ahmad Powell, Péter Pozsonyi, András Pozsár, David Presley, Kristóf Párdányi, Ollie Robbins, Béla Rácz, Balázs Révész, Szabolcs Sipos, Laurent Soriano, Stephanie Sousa, Marc Spicer, Dante Spinotti, Mark Strasburg, Gábor Szeles, Gergely Sztellik, Gabor Szucs-Kiraly, Jeff Taylor, Péter Rácz Tiger, Henry Tirl, István Török, János Varga, Balázs Várszegi, Ádám Wallner, Matt Windon, Viktor Zsámbék, Ian Speed |
Animation Department | Louis Jones, Brian Mendenhall, Jess Morris, Christopher Mullins, Andrew Ogawa, Danny Southard |
Casting Department | Zsolt Csutak, Robert Douthat, Lisa Marie Dupree, Barbara Harris, Tamás Kertész, Balázs Kovács, Deirdre Peterson, Rose Wicksteed |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | Brigitta Barko, Jennifer Benton, Gergely Borbas, Ibolya Bárdosi, Tünde Bényei, Giovanni Casalnuovo, Suzanne M.B. Chambliss, Kati Chwist, Scott T. Coppock, Árpád Danilovics, Melinda Domán, Ferenc Filipp, Serena Fiumi, Andrée Fortier, Rebecca Higginson, Frances Jacques-LeCompte, Sarah P. Koeppe, Jo Korer, Zsofia Laczko, Mary Malin, Reina Rose Martinez, Dena Matranga, Lee Ann McDade, Gayle Merindino, Heather Rae Miller, Christopher Lee Moore, Bela Nagy-Kazy, Péter Palotás, Enzo Serafino Pellegrino, Anina Pinter, Jane Ryder, Salvatore Salzano, Reba Saul, Cydney Tucker, Rodney Williamson, Margaret Wren |
Editorial Department | Dane Bergerson, Michael Boggs, Salvatore Catanzaro, Bob Ducsay, Danny Elhaj, Janó Fekete, Benjamin Howdeshell, Joseph Kirkland, Christopher Kulikowski, Jackie Lee, Nick Monton, Missy Papageorge, Tim Parsons, Alex Romano, Ian Silverstein, Kurt Smith, Stefan Sonnenfeld |
Location Management | Rudolf András, Phillip Jordan Brooks, János Cserven, Kevin Gaspard, Barnabas Kiraly, Laszlo Rorarius |
Music Department | Dallas Aimer, Azam Ali, Roger Argente, John Barrett, Jeffrey Biggers, Richard Bissill, Andy Brown, Brian Bulman, Mark Curry, Jessica Dannheisser, Tim Davies, Mark Denis, Michael Dore, David Fleming, Julian Kershaw, Steven Kofsky, Elisa Kustow, Joanna Forbes L Estrange, Matthew Margeson, Stephen McLaughlin, Satoshi Mark Noguchi, Tom Pearce, Vladimir Podgoretsky, Satnam Ramgotra, Jason Ruder, Czarina Russell, Katrina Schiller, Jill Streater, Bobby Tahouri, Martin Tillman, Jeff Toyne, Lawrence Wallington, Happy Walters, Hilda Örvarsdóttir, Atli Örvarsson, Rachel Bolt, Andy Brown, Steve Mair, Stephen McLaughlin, Jason Soudah |
Script and Continuity Department | Dóra Endrényi, Dora Simko |
Transportation Department | Csaba Bagossy, Jerrin Comeaux, Dennis W. Cook Jr., András Cserbik, Bart Figueiredo, Jiri Fleischer, George Fohn, Jeffrey Gowing, Mihály Gál, Gerald Hardy, Beau Holden, Gary L. Horton, Claudia Kossik, Cain Lee, Jr. Sandor Paradi, Aaron Pigg, Buddy Pine, Zoltán Szepesi, Pavel Voracek, Doug Wilson, Charlie Wright, Christy Zeller |
Additional Crew | Danny Dano Anderson, Nina Armstrong, Amber Asaro, Bara Barova, Joey Baxter, Csaba Benedek, Samantha Bonilla, Aaron T. Brown, Brandon e Buck, Dottie Buck, Jennifer Bushnell, Alex Capaldi, Catherine Charlton, Ricardo Contreras, Aniko Csat, Peter Cseri, Péter Danó, Michael Davison, Christopher Dickerson, Geoffrey Doempke, Jaz Donaldson, Robert Douthat, Elaine Eaton, Kristin Fagereng, Nora Feher, Eric Fitzgerald, Lucia Foster Found, Larry Garrison, Brendan Garst, Sara Gergely, Matthew Goodwin, Daniel Griesmer, Tamás Gál, Julia Hargitay, Charles Heaphy, Daniel Herther, Beau Holden, Zoltan Horkai, Andy Horwitz, Elizabeth Hutchison, Christian Juneau, Géza Jánossy, Curt Kanemoto, Ferenc Kondor, Barnabás Kovács, Ej Kropp, Bendegúz Körmöczi, Balázs Labancz, Liz Landers, Avi Levy, Frankie Lindquist, Marilyn Lindsay, Thomas Loftus, Linda Marian, Gergö Marton, Skylar Mathey, Vera Matousova, Patrick McBride, Tony McCullough, Derrick Mims, Misi Moso, Rebecca Steel Roven Oakley, Hilde Odelga, Alina Papp, Dóra Papp, János Papp, Rachel Perez, Janos Prihoda, Eva Quiroz, Marlaine Reiner, Luigi Riitano, Anett Rumanoczky, Giuliano Salvatore, Rohit Sharma, Oliver Simor, Sarah Soape, Andy Stephens, Amy Szabados, Richard Szabó, Enikö Szakács, Istvan Szori, Alexandra Szucs, Erika Tamás, Leigh Tarrant, Miles Teves, B.J. Thomas Jr., Batizi Timea, Kolos Trimmel, Ferenc Tóth, Harris Vealer, Susie Weathersby, Shawnia Willson, Gabriella Winkler, Justine Winkler, Gábor Xantus, Anthony Yuse, Filip Zafran, Peter Ziak |
Thanks | Bob Badami, Michael Davison, Hans Zimmer |
Genres | Action, Adventure, Fantasy |
Companies | Atlas Entertainment, Relativity Media |
Countries | USA |
Languages | English, Latin |
ContentRating | PG-13 |
ImDbRating | 5.4 |
ImDbRatingVotes | 95892 |
MetacriticRating | 28 |
Keywords | middle ages,14th century,knight,monk,witch |