Agrega una trama en tu idiomaMeeting in an isolated place, Venger and Dungeon Master make a dangerous deal: Venger will command Hank, Diana, Sheila, Bobby, Presto and Eric travel at the edge of Realm to find and destroy... Leer todoMeeting in an isolated place, Venger and Dungeon Master make a dangerous deal: Venger will command Hank, Diana, Sheila, Bobby, Presto and Eric travel at the edge of Realm to find and destroy a very special key, without Dungeon Master's support. If they succeed, they will come hom... Leer todoMeeting in an isolated place, Venger and Dungeon Master make a dangerous deal: Venger will command Hank, Diana, Sheila, Bobby, Presto and Eric travel at the edge of Realm to find and destroy a very special key, without Dungeon Master's support. If they succeed, they will come home, but if they lose, then Venger not only will have their magic weapons, but their lives t... Leer todo
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I have a theory about why certain stories stick in our guts more than others. I'll call it The Coitus Interruptus Story. Case in point, 1939's Wizard of Oz. American classic. Beloved the world over. Very fine storytelling. But famously missing the victory lap at the end. The scene of Dorothy and friends celebrating the death of the Wicked Witch in the Emerald City and a parade was too expensive and troublesome, and the film worked without it. I claim that the reason why we all watch that movie over and over is BECAUSE that scene is missing. The itch for that celebration is never scratched. Same with Dungeons and Dragons. We never get to see the kids go home or have the opportunity to do so. Of all the 1980s action adventure cartoons D&D is the most special, the one seated deepest in our hearts. Why? Because coitus interruptus. We never came, so to speak, to the end.
This version of Requiem comes albeit long after the fact. But I'm happy and grateful it's here. Presto and Venger don't sound as good as the other characters, but that's small change. Presto's ending is cute. I'm looking forward to finding out more about Requiem's production, because it really is great. It's a shame that the same love and labor didn't find its way into the recent IDW limited series that treats the whole show like yet another nostalgia-berry joke.
The plot of the episode is that Dungeon Master makes a deadly wager with Venger, as Venger would give the six kids a quest as a test of courage, with success allowing them to return home, but failure will only allow Venger to not only claim the kids' weapons, but also their lives. The one stipulation: Dungeon Master must not be allowed to help them. Once Dungeon Masters abandons them while chased by a three-headed dragon, the kids start to crumble, with Eric having enough, and when Venger gives his quest, to go to Realm's Edge and destroy a key that is hidden in a cenotaph that they must cast into the Abyss, Eric, Shiela, and Presto break from the group to accept the evil wizard's quest.
This is a neat fan-made episode that adapts what was an audio drama for how the final episode of season three would go. To make the cartoon, scenes from the cartoon were recut, and even adding in some new dialogue and events. For the voice acting, two of the VAs from the original series, Katie Leigh and Frank Welker, to repise their roles as Shiela and Uni. For the others, new voice actors take over and do a good job, including Wally Wingert as Hank and Dungeon Master and Neil Kaplan as Venger.
I have to admire the care that the creators went to making this, as it feels just like an actual episode, and the ending, which I will not spoil, is a nice way to give the series the closure it was needed for over 30 years. This is one fan film that is worth checking out if you are an 80's kid.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDaniel Roebuck played Jay Leno in The Night Shift, and Wally Wingert announced Leno during his last four years on The Tonight Show.
- Citas
Redeemed Venger: [to Presto] First lesson apprentice... Never keep a lady waiting.