Director:
Dmitriy DyachenkoCámara:
Sergey TrofimovMúsica:
George KallisReparto:
Viktor Khorinyak, Mila Sivatskaya, Ekaterina Vilkova, Konstantin Lavronenko, Evgeniy Dyatlov, Elena Yakovleva, Sergey Burunov, Aleksandr Semchev (más)Streaming (1)
Sinopsis(1)
La historia de El último guerrero está ambientada en el Reino de Belogorie, un mundo medieval, paralelo al nuestro, habitado por personajes de los cuentos de hadas rusos. Un timador moscovita de nuestro universo se ve transportado a ese lugar mágico, en el que un mago lo reconoce como el descendiente del mítico héroe Ilya Muromets, escondido en la Tierra desde hace años. (Movistar+)
(más)Videos (2)
Reseñas (3)
I wish we had fairy tales as well-crafted in the Czech Republic. I would describe it as a cheeky attempt at parodying Russian legends and mythology, and ultimately fairy tales in general. It's sprinkled with non-violent humor that, in most cases, works well, has an original concept, and mixes two different worlds using a successful method of incorporating modern aspects. It naturally earns points for its effects and sets. However, I am reserving judgment for future episodes. ()
Great Russian fantasy film! Although it is as intense as The Witcher, it is rather of a more fairy-tale nature, but still excellent and I appreciate the fact that the fantasy genre is slowly dying out. The film has a quite good and original story about a man who is transported from the present to the fantastic land of Belohoria, and I like that he can use abilities that he knows from normal life. There are plenty of classic fairy-tale elements. There is a water sprite, a giant, a witch with a walking house, a powerful wizard, and a dragon, and the movie manages to combine this world with effective humor, which was welcome. It also has great visuals and likeable main characters. Story****, Action****, Humor****, Violence>No, Entertainment****, Music*****, Visual****, Atmosphere****, Tension***. Solid. 8/10. ()
I was expecting a fantasy film, but what I got felt more like a fairy tale crossed with overly simple comedy. The unmistakable influence of Disney was a bit too glaring, and the non-Russian soundtrack kept pulling me out of the story. But hey, what am I to do? Ivan was just the right amount of dumb, Koschey was convincingly Deathless, Vasilisa was charmingly decorative, Baba Yaga was appropriately grumpy, and the water spirit felt like a good replacement for Jar Jar Binks. I won't lie, I did find some enjoyment in the film. It's just that at times, I felt like the humor was being pushed a bit too hard. I would've appreciated a stronger Russian influence and a little less "Shrek-ness." / Lesson learned: When someone offers you a helping hand, try not to scream. 3*+ ()
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