Gabriel Knight, the owner of a New Orleans, Louisiana bookstore, gets tangled up in the investigation of a series of voodoo-related murders currently plaguing the city.Gabriel Knight, the owner of a New Orleans, Louisiana bookstore, gets tangled up in the investigation of a series of voodoo-related murders currently plaguing the city.Gabriel Knight, the owner of a New Orleans, Louisiana bookstore, gets tangled up in the investigation of a series of voodoo-related murders currently plaguing the city.
Tim Curry
- Gabriel Knight
- (voice)
- …
Mark Hamill
- Det. Mosely
- (voice)
- …
Leah Remini
- Grace Nakimura
- (voice)
Virginia Capers
- Narrator
- (voice)
Michael Dorn
- Dr. John
- (voice)
Leilani Jones
- Malia Gedde
- (voice)
Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
- Wolfgang
- (voice)
Susan Silo
- Madame Cazanoux
- (voice)
Christopher Lytton
- Crash
- (voice)
- (as Chris Lytton)
Jim Cummings
- Desk Sgt. Frick
- (voice)
- …
Mary Kay Bergman
- Gerde
- (voice)
- …
Monte Markham
- Prof. Hartridge
- (voice)
- …
Rocky Carroll
- Willy Walker
- (voice)
Jeff Bennett
- Sam
- (voice)
- …
Linda Gary
- Grandma Knight
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first PC game to use the words "fuck" and "shit" uncensored in the same year of 1993, which was in the PC game Police Quest: Open Season (1993). This was one year before the ESRB rating came out.
- GoofsAt one point, Gabriel attends a college lecture which he also records with his tape recorder. At the end he gets drowsy and falls asleep. As he does so the lecturers statement become garbled indicating Gabriel's loss of focus. When the tape is played back, one would expect the end of the lecture to not be garbled, since the tape recorder itself doesn't fall asleep, but the end of the recording repeats the same garbled ending.
- Quotes
Grace Nakimura: If you try to look down my shirt one more time, I'm leaving.
Gabriel Knight: I'm just trying to refresh my memory.
Grace Nakimura: I know what you're trying to refresh, and it isn't your memory, get down!
- Alternate versionsThere are two versions of the movie. The first one came on 11 floppy disks, had no voice acting at all and thinned "cutscenes". The second version was released on CD, featured an excellent voice acting and better (smoother) cutscenes. Additionally the CD version had (very) few improvements on the in-game icon graphics.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cybermania '94: Ultimate Gamers Awards (1994)
Featured review
Gabriel Knight immediately made an impression on me as it was one of the few games I have been able to completely immerse myself into.
I turn off all the lights and close the curtains, turn up the sound and discard my life and responsibilities for a few precious hours.
A form of escapism? most definitely, I played Gabriel Knight not just for the entertainment, but for the plot and story, I hungered for more, I wished to experience everything that Gabriel experience.. so unlike my dreary mundane life.
One unique characteristic of this adventure game is its "real life" setting. It seems the norm these days for adventure games to be set in magical fantasy cities or post apocalyptic war-zones. In either case it certainly raises an eyebrow when you come across a game set in modern day New Orleans. A normal city with magical properties of its own. The unique blend of white, carribean and French influences make it unlike any other place on earth. And this comes through in the game. The setting and backdrop to the drama that unfolds has a life of its own and certainly adds to the flavour of the game.
The gameplay itself un folds in a somewhat pedestrian fashion and there are a great deal of questions that you must find answers too in order to unravel the plot. However it is this pedestrian real world approach that makes the game more enjoyable. Such attention to realism makes it all the more easier to delve into.
I turn off all the lights and close the curtains, turn up the sound and discard my life and responsibilities for a few precious hours.
A form of escapism? most definitely, I played Gabriel Knight not just for the entertainment, but for the plot and story, I hungered for more, I wished to experience everything that Gabriel experience.. so unlike my dreary mundane life.
One unique characteristic of this adventure game is its "real life" setting. It seems the norm these days for adventure games to be set in magical fantasy cities or post apocalyptic war-zones. In either case it certainly raises an eyebrow when you come across a game set in modern day New Orleans. A normal city with magical properties of its own. The unique blend of white, carribean and French influences make it unlike any other place on earth. And this comes through in the game. The setting and backdrop to the drama that unfolds has a life of its own and certainly adds to the flavour of the game.
The gameplay itself un folds in a somewhat pedestrian fashion and there are a great deal of questions that you must find answers too in order to unravel the plot. However it is this pedestrian real world approach that makes the game more enjoyable. Such attention to realism makes it all the more easier to delve into.
Details
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- Country of origin
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- Language
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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