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Solomon Kane (film)

film

Solomon Kane is a sword and sorceryfilm based on the pulp magazine character of the same name created in by Robert E. Howard. Written and directed by M. J. Bassett, the film stars James Purefoy in the title role.[3] Despite obtaining the rights in , filming did not begin until January

The film is an original story for the Kane character and was intended to be the first of a trilogy.

The plot follows a redemption story for Kane, from the end of his life as a privateer, through the salvation of his soul by rescuing a Puritan girl and the beginning of his life as the Puritan avenger of the source material. It was produced by a consortium of French, Czech, and British companies and mostly filmed in the Czech Republic.

The film was first shown at the Toronto International Film Festival. It went on general release in France, Spain, and the UK over the end of and the beginning of It has a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 67%.

The screenplay was novelised by award-winning fantasy author Ramsey Campbell.

Plot

In the year , in North Africa, English privateer Solomon Kane leads his ship's crew into battle against the Ottoman defenders of a fortress town.

After defeating the defenders, Kane and his men raid the fortress, where most of the crew are killed by demons. Kane fights his way to the throne room, but, before he can loot the riches, he is confronted by the "Devil's Reaper", a demon who tells him his soul is forfeit to Satan after his life of sin. Kane rejects his fate and jumps out of a window to escape.

One year later, Kane has returned to England and found sanctuary in a monastery, renouncing violence and donating his wealth to the Church in hopes of finding redemption. After a prophetic dream, the abbot expels Kane. On the road, Kane is ambushed by robbers who mock his vow of pacifism and leave him for dead.

He is found and treated by the Crowthorns, a Puritan family traveling west to the New World. They find a witch, who marks Meredith Crowthorn. Later, they are ambushed by followers of sorcerer Malachi who kidnap Meredith and kill her father and brothers. Kane renounces his vows and swears to rescue Meredith.

Kane battles Malachi's followers across the countryside, rescuing many captives but not finding Meredith.

On his journey, he meets a deranged priest who explains Malachi's followers are taking the weaker survivors of their raids as slaves and corrupting the strong into soldiers.

Wwe kane age and height: Solomon Kane () - Parents guide and Certifications from around the world.

The priest tries to feed Kane to his parishioners, who have become ghouls, but Kane escapes, only to face the robbers who attacked him earlier, now corrupted servants of Malachi. He kills two robbers and interrogates the survivor, who says Meredith is dead. Kane throws the robber to the ghouls, and, believing his quest for redemption has failed, drinks to excess at a country inn.

Former shipmates recognize him and try to recruit him as a leader of a resistance against Malachi, but Kane refuses. The inn is attacked by Malachi's followers, led by his lieutenant the Masked Rider. They crucify the leaders of the resistance, including Kane. As Kane hangs on the cross, Meredith cries out his name from her cage in the back of the raiders' wagon; Kane realizes he still has a chance to save her and pulls himself free.

Before Malachi's remaining men can finish him, they are killed by survivors of the resistance, who take Kane to safety. Kane is healed by a pagan woman and becomes anxious to confront the raiders.

Malachi used to be a healer before making a bargain with the Devil. He now lives in Kane's ancestral home, from which Kane had been expelled in his youth after defying his father.

Kane leads the rebels into the castle via an underground passage, and, as they fight Malachi's minions, Kane heads for the dungeons and frees many captives. There, he finds his father, who reveals the Masked Rider is Kane's older brother Marcus, whom Kane thought he had accidentally killed after his banishment. Instead, Marcus was rendered comatose, and when healers failed to revive him, his father turned to Malachi.

Disfigured and turned to Malachi's will, Marcus became the Masked Rider. Kane reluctantly kills his father at his request, then heads to the throne room to confront Malachi. Kane finds Meredith in a cage, and as she warns him of a trap, Marcus stabs him in the back. Kane tries to reason with Marcus, but they engage in a duel; Kane wins after setting Marcus on fire and decapitating him.

Malachi uses Meredith's blood to release a demon sent to claim Kane's soul, but Kane kills Malachi and sacrifices himself to close the portal; both Malachi and the creature are sucked back through it, leaving Kane unconscious on the floor.

Solomon kane age rating All All. Sign In. Parents guide. Content rating. An adult man removes his shirt to wash himself in a river.

He awakens and explains to Meredith that he has finally redeemed his soul. Kane buries his father and brother and reunites Meredith with her mother. He assumes a new mission: to roam the Earth combating the forces of darkness.

Cast

Production

Wandering Star optioned the film and book publishing rights to Solomon Kane in from the Robert E.

Howard Estate. In , it was announced that Christopher Lambert was offered the role of Kane and was seriously "considering it as it's a very compelling part".[citation needed] At this point Don Murphy was a producer on the film, with Samuel Hadida of Davis Film and Paul Berrow and Michael Berrow of Wandering Star Pictures, and was attempting to set up the film with New Line Cinema.

Murphy left the project in under a cloud when the negotiations fell apart with New Line. Things went quiet for a while during which time several scripts were developed around the African adventures of Solomon Kane from the classic text. Then M. J. Basset was hired as writer and director of the film, with a brief to write an origin story based loosely on the Howard poems and classic text, and in August she finished writing the script.

Finally on 1 October , it was announced that James Purefoy was cast as the lead.[4]

Principal photography began in Prague on 14 January and was scheduled for a 12‑week shoot. Director M.J. Bassett says of James Purefoy that he "is a delight to work with; he is giving his heart and soul to this. He's in brilliant physical shape and his sword fighting is just brilliant to behold and he's finding depth and sophistication within the character in ways I really hoped he would".

As of the end of February [update], sets were still being built for the later part of the production, and Max Von Sydow and Mackenzie Crook had yet to begin shooting.[5] Jan Cileček, a Czech artist produced a number of sculptures for the film and there are some photographs available on his website.[6] Some aerial sequences were shot at Stanhope and St.

Abbs in the Scottish Borders.[7]

On 16 April , M.J. Bassett posted a message on her blog saying "Principal photography is completed on Kane. Now for the long-haul of post-production to get it all into shape". She also says that everything is set up for the future parts of the trilogy, which "will tap more completely into Howard's original stories".

Finally she mentioned that "the final scenes of the film were shot in England on the North Devon coast. It was all done on a private estate which used to belong to the real Sir Richard Grenville".[5] On 7 April , Bassett announced that production of the film is complete.[8]

On 23 October , Bassett announced on her blog that "Kane is slowly gearing up for its first set of release dates at the end of this year and early ".[9] According to Paradox Entertainment CEO Fredrik Malmberg, the film's budget was $40 million.[10]

Release

Theatrical

Solomon Kane's world premiere was on 16 September at the Toronto International Film Festival.[11] The film was featured at the San Diego Comic-Con, which Basset and Purefoy both attended.[12] It was released in France on 23 December It was released in Spain on 1 January [13]

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom theatrical release was on 19 February ;[14] in its first week it opened at seventh place in the UK top ten with a weekend gross of £, across cinemas.[15]

Worldwide

According to Bassett's blog, the North American wide release of the film was delayed for legal reasons.[16] The film's American premiere took place at ActionFest on April 12, [17] Bassett announced on his blog that the film was acquired by The Weinstein Company and would be released through their subdivision Radius (co-founded by Tom Quinn, who also co-founded ActionFest) for the US.

The film was released on August 24 on VOD and September 28 in theaters.[18]

Home media

The DVD was released in the UK on 28 June It was the best selling DVD in week commencing 5 July [19]

The film was released on both Blu-ray and DVD to the home market in North America on 16 July by Starz/Anchor Bay.

The US extras features included: Anamorphic with a English Dolby Digital track, Subtitles in English and Spanish only, Commentary with Michael J. Bassett and James Purefoy, The Making Of Solomon Kane (), Cave Fight deleted scene (), The Creation Of The Fire Demon (), Interview With Writer/Director Michael J. Bassett (), Interview with Actor James Purefoy () and Original Concept Art ().

A 2 disc Collector's Edition was released in France by Metropolitan.

French extras features include: English and French audio, optional Subtitles in French, Introduction by the director, Commentary with James Purefoy and Michael J. Bassett, Interactive Diary, Partial interactive movie playback, Comparative film Storyboard of 7 sequences, Cave Fight Deleted Scene (with video introduction of the director), Making Of, Interview with Michael J.

Bassett, Interview with James Purefoy, Interview with producers Samuel Hadida and Paul Berrow, Creation of the Fire Demon, Closing sequence Design, Production Drawings and Posters, Music Video, Trailer, Presentation at Comic Con.

It was announced on 9 March that the film would have its Southeast US Regional Premiere as the Opening Night film of ActionFest on 12 April This marks the second year in a row that a film starring James Purefoy and with sword and stunt coordination by Richard Ryan opened ActionFest (after 's Ironclad).

Soundtrack

  1. Opening Battle
  2. Aftermath
  3. Reaper
  4. Marked Man
  5. You Must Leave Us
  6. Solomon Attacked
  7. Solomon's Brother
  8. Moving On
  9. Witch Burning Aftermath
  10. Kid Witch Tale
  11. Village Pillage
  12. Flashback Dream
  13. Making Camp
  14. Making Camp (Alt)
  15. Bad Guys Attack Family
  16. Master Fight
  17. Get Her Back
  18. Cloak And Dagger
  19. Search For Meredith
  20. Seeking Refuge
  21. Meredith Escapes
  22. Evil Is Already Here
  23. Flesh Eaters Attack Solomon
  24. Stooges
  25. She's Dead!, She's Not!, Well
  26. Crucifixion (Part 1)
  27. Crucifixion (Part 2)
  28. Healed
  29. Castle Approach
  30. Father's Story
  31. Single Blow (Part 1)
  32. Single Blow (Part 2)
  33. Malachi
  34. Meredith

Reception

Critical response

Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 67% based on reviews from 46 critics, with an average rating of 6 out of The consensus reads: "Solomon Kane's formulaic and bleak narrative is overcome by an entertaining, straightforward adherence to its genre, exciting gore, and a gratifying lead performance by James Purefoy."[20]Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 48 out of based on reviews from 15 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[21]

Empire rated the film at 3 out of 5 stars, complimenting writer-director M.

J. Bassett as handling the film "with the same level of commitment Peter Jackson brought to the Lord of the Rings trilogy, the darker moments of which are an obvious influence on Bassett's film". The review says of the film as a whole: "For less than the effects budget of this year's other sword 'n' sorcery adventures, Percy Jackson and Clash of the Titans, Bassett has delivered a dark-as-balls Highlander for the 21st century, played with such conviction it's hard not to be swept along".[22]Total Film also rated the film at 3/5 stars with the conclusion: "A brutal fusion of angst and action, this mini-epic gives the sword-and-sorcery genre a bleak, brusque new life.

Watch it for some terrific limbchopping and a mighty turn by James Purefoy".[23] Sister magazine SFX rated the film at 4/5 stars.

Daniel bryan age Solomon Kane is a sword and sorcery film based on the pulp magazine character of the same name created in by Robert E. Written and directed by M. Bassett , the film stars James Purefoy in the title role. The film is an original story for the Kane character and was intended to be the first of a trilogy. The plot follows a redemption story for Kane, from the end of his life as a privateer , through the salvation of his soul by rescuing a Puritan girl and the beginning of his life as the Puritan avenger of the source material.

The review describes the location work as one of the films "great strengths", comparing the film to Witchfinder General and The Blood on Satan's Claw, "a landscape alive with the sense of supernatural forces gathering beneath the frost and the empty fields". Purefoy is also acclaimed, with "a sense of huge faultiness coiling within him [which] makes for a genuinely intriguing hero".

He does note though that “it’s a shame that the film stumbles at the very end[with what] lookslike a Satanic Transformer. [A] clashingly mainstream’boss level’[-esqe] climax that bedevils every superhero movie these days, puncturing the movie’s careful atmosphere of pre-Enlightenment dread.“[24]

Variety gave the film a negative review, stating that the film "just isn't much fun".

Bassett's direction is described as being handled "confidently if without much flair" while Purefoy "gamely endures heavy exertion throughout; it's not his fault the script lends his character might and a mission but little personality".[25] Phelim O'Neill at The Guardian also gave the film 3/5 stars.

Its conclusion was mixed, stating: "There's plenty that's good here: a serious tone, steady pacing, muddy and bloody scenery and a convincing turn by Purefoy in his own west country accent. But Kane is an ill fit into the origins tale template; it's a story with few surprises".[26]Time Out awarded the film with 4/5 stars, giving a positive review which praised the originality of the story and sharp 17th-century setting.[27]

Awards

Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA
Award Category Result
Saturn Award Best DVD/Blu-ray ReleaseNominated
Fantasporto
Award Nominee Result
Audience Jury Award Michael J.

Bassett

Won

Planned sequels

James Purefoy, and various Hollywood media outlets, have gone on record as saying that M. J. Bassett promised Solomon Kane was intended as a trilogy with the first movie serving to "propel Solomon on into sequels" to further establish Purefoy's celebrity.[28][29][30] The first movie was to bring Kane into a "fully formed" character so that his backstory didn't need to be repeated.[30] However, due to the film's poor critical reception and box office performance, no sequels where made despite fan outcry for the trilogy to go ahead.[31][32]

References

  1. ^ abc"SOLOMON KANE - British Board of Film Classification".

    .

    Wwe big show age

    Let us notify you once it becomes available on more services. We checked for updates on streaming services on January 20, at PM. Something wrong? Let us know! A nomadic 16th century warrior, condemned to hell for his brutal past, seeks redemption by renouncing violence, but finds some things are worth burning for as he fights to free a young Puritan woman from the grip of evil.

    Archived from the original on 26 March Retrieved 16 February

  2. ^"Solomon Kane". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 12 December Retrieved 5 July
  3. ^"Solomon Kane Assault on the Castle Clip and Behind-the-Scenes Creature Feature". DreadCentral. 24 December Archived from the original on 13 December Retrieved 10 October
  4. ^"James Purefoy is Solomon Kane".

    Superhero Hype. 1 October Archived from the original on 23 February Retrieved 23 February

  5. ^ abBassett, Michael (9 February ). "Michael Bassett's Production Blog".

    John cena age By Jeffrey M. Anderson , based on child development research. How do we rate? Parents need to know that Solomon Kane is a dark fantasy adventure movie with lots of violent fighting and action. It's based on pulp stories written in the s and s by Robert E.

    . Archived from the original on 30 April Retrieved 10 October

  6. ^"Work for Movies". . Archived from the original on 4 November Retrieved 10 October
  7. ^"Filmed Here - Edinburgh Film Focus". Archived from the original on 18 February Retrieved 20 February
  8. ^"'SORRY FOR THE SILENCE' - Bassett's blog".

    7 April Archived from the original on 11 April Retrieved 20 April

  9. ^"'23rd October' - Bassett's blog". 23 October Archived from the original on 23 July Retrieved 24 October
  10. ^" &#; Paradox Entertainment, Fredrik Malmberg: "En storsäljare"". Archived from the original on 23 April Retrieved 21 October
  11. ^Punter, Jennie (21 July ).

    "'Jennifer's Body' to bow at Toronto". Variety. Archived from the original on 24 July Retrieved 1 March

  12. ^Connors, Ryan (26 July ). "Comic-Con: Solomon Kane is Surprisingly Very Awesome". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on 14 November Retrieved 10 October
  13. ^Arias, María Jose (25 November ).

    "Tráiler en castellano de 'Solomon Kane'". Extracine (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 20 August Retrieved 10 October

  14. ^Barton, Steve (28 January ). "New Making-of Solomon Kane Featurette Available". DreadCentral. Archived from the original on 4 January Retrieved 10 October
  15. ^"UK Box Office: 19–21 February ".

    UK Film Council. Archived from the original on 3 March Retrieved 24 February

  16. ^Bassett, Michael (17 September ). "Solomon Kane on Netflix". Michael Bassett's blog. Archived from the original on 21 April Retrieved 10 October
  17. ^Dale, Austin (8 March ). "ActionFest Announces Opening Night Film "Solomon Kane"".

    IndieWire. Retrieved 24 August

  18. ^"SOLOMON KANE US RELEASE DATE!!!". Wordpress. 10 July Archived from the original on 16 July Retrieved 24 August
  19. ^"DVD Sales Chart week commencing: Monday 05 July ". British Video Association. 5 July Archived from the original on 6 July Retrieved 5 July
  20. ^"Soloman Kane".

    Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on 11 August Retrieved 10 October

  21. ^"Solomon Kane". . Archived from the original on 3 December Retrieved 16 February
  22. ^Hughes, David. "Solomon Kane review". Empire. Archived from the original on 24 September Retrieved 22 February
  23. ^Crocker, Jonathon (10 February ).

    "Review of Solomon Kane". Total Film. Archived from the original on 7 July Retrieved 22 February

  24. ^Setchfield, Nick (17 February ). "FILM REVIEW: Solomon Kane". SFX. Archived from the original on 3 May Retrieved 22 February
  25. ^Harvey, Dennis (9 October ).

    "Solomon Kane". Variety. Archived from the original on 28 July Retrieved 27 July

  26. ^O'Neill, Phelim (18 February ). "Solomon Kane". The Guardian.

  27. Wwe kane age and height
  28. Undertaker age
  29. Wwe kane age
  30. Archived from the original on 2 December Retrieved 22 February

  31. ^Floyd, Nigel (18 February ). "Solomon Kane". Time Out. Archived from the original on 17 October Retrieved 13 February
  32. ^Masters, Charles. "Five join 'Solomon Kane' cast". The Hollywood Reporter. Associated Press.

    Retrieved 12 October

  33. ^"James Purefoy to Play the Lead Role in Solomon Kane". Movieweb. Valnet. Retrieved 12 October
  34. ^ ab"5 Questions with James Purefoy of 'Solomon Kane'". East Valley Tribune.

  35. Solomon kane 2012
  36. Solomon kane imdb
  37. Solomon kane 2
  38. Solomon kane movie download
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  40. ^Bowels, Duncan. "Solomon Kane review". Den of Geek. Retrieved 12 October
  41. ^Norman, David. "Notes On A Film: Solomon Kane". clandestinecritic. Retrieved 12 October

External links