An expedition led by adventurer DARREN McCALL and funded by the wealthy Harry Vargas braves the impenetrable jungle to retrieve a fabled bejeweled dagger from an ancient burial ground. But p... Read allAn expedition led by adventurer DARREN McCALL and funded by the wealthy Harry Vargas braves the impenetrable jungle to retrieve a fabled bejeweled dagger from an ancient burial ground. But pulling the dagger from its rightful resting place awakens the long-dormant plant creature ... Read allAn expedition led by adventurer DARREN McCALL and funded by the wealthy Harry Vargas braves the impenetrable jungle to retrieve a fabled bejeweled dagger from an ancient burial ground. But pulling the dagger from its rightful resting place awakens the long-dormant plant creature - part plant, part animal, and all bloodthirsty -- and sends it on a feeding frenzy from w... Read all
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Lin
- (as Wayne Pere)
- Customs Agent
- (as Diego Martinez)
- Old Yambarri Woman
- (as Monica Pena)
- Warrior #4
- (uncredited)
- Camp Assistant
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Complete disaster
The screenplay, frankly, is where everything falls apart. A movie can survive weak effects, low budgets, even mediocre acting-but when the script is a mess, there's no saving it. Mandrake never establishes a clear sense of who the characters are, what they're doing, or why the audience should care. Every moment that should feel suspenseful ends up feeling random. It jumps between tones so wildly that you're not sure if you're supposed to be scared, intrigued, or just waiting for it to end.
It's hard not to compare it to Jaws-because Jaws knew exactly how to use atmosphere, tension, and pacing. Spielberg understood how to build suspense without showing everything, allowing the imagination to fill the gaps. Mandrake, on the other hand, throws everything at you but somehow still manages to say nothing. The directing feels unfocused, like the camera itself is wandering through the woods trying to find the story.
Character development? Practically nonexistent. You don't know who these people are, you don't care what happens to them, and the film doesn't give you any reason to invest in their journey. There are glimpses-tiny moments-where you can see what the movie wanted to be: a moody psychological folk horror that gets under your skin. But those moments vanish as quickly as they appear, replaced by confusion and a total lack of narrative payoff.
By the halfway mark, the film already feels like it's going nowhere fast, and by the end, you realize it never really started anywhere, either. It's disorganized, disjointed, and painfully slow for something that's supposed to keep you on edge.
To put it bluntly, Mandrake is a cinematic train wreck. It tries to be haunting but ends up being hollow. It tries to be mysterious but comes off as muddled. If you value your time-or your sanity-skip this one. There's no reward waiting at the end of this film, just confusion and regret.
The very definition of 'low budget'
That opening is a kind of warning of things to come. Some films thrive on having a low budget. The lack of money behind the picture forces the film-makers to use new and more subtle techniques to tell the story. Not here. This film has no budget and it shows in every scene.
It's about a team of archaeologists, sent somewhere in South America (like the location really matters!) to retrieve something for someone (again, such details are kind of pointless in the scheme of things). However, this 'South American' jungle looks suspiciously like some nice grassy fields in America. Plus the 'natives' also look a little Caucasian, considering they are supposed to have lived in the hot jungle all their lives.
The acting isn't all bad, but the dialogue is. Just because the film is set in a wood (sorry, jungle), the writers seem to want to make the characters talk like they're out of Predator. Yes, there's something hunting them, but whereas Predator used a monster that was actually there, the makers of Mandrake spent the entire $2.50 budget on some 'creepy' CGI tentacles. Woo.
If you like cheesy monster-munching movies, then you probably know plenty out there which will amuse and entertain (try things like Deep Rising, Tremors, or Grabbers to name but a few). Mandrake is not one of them.
Barely watchable, but watchable.
Oh well. With a better script, maybe this movie could have been good, but it's still watchable. Barely.
The Jungle Feeds on the Blood of Invaders
When they reach a tomb facing south in a sacred ground, they open the tomb and finds a dagger with a ruby craved in a skeleton and Lin removes weapon from the grave, accomplishing the objective of their assignment. Dr. Felicia advises them that the tomb has a warning advising to not remove the dagger. Soon they discover that nature and the Yamballi tribe are chasing them; further, the previous expedition sent to the forest to retrieve the dagger has been slaughtered.
"Mandrake" is a TV movie released in Brazil on DVD. The story is absolutely predictable and the adventure of the expeditionary team is not scary. In the end, watching this film was a waste of time in a Saturday afternoon. Better off if I had taken a nap. My vote is three.
Title (Brazil): "A Raiz do Mal" ("The Root of the Evil")
Better than most syfy productions, but not saying much
Despite the cool premise and twenty-five minutes of genuine atmosphere, Mandrake quickly becomes repetitive and predictable. The dialogue is fairly unimpressive mostly, with a number of cheesy moments that never ring true, and the direction while better than you would expect is patchy particularly towards the end where the film unravels in credibility. The film's pace is uneven, the beginning is very well-paced, but some of the middle drag and the end feels rushed. I didn't find myself connecting to any of Mandrake's characters, and in all honesty I don't think the actors did either.
In conclusion, better than expected but that's not saying very much. 4/10 Bethany Cox
Did you know
- GoofsAfter Santiago saves McCall, hes injured. Later they opt to field dress his wound. Blonde Dr says, "being in so many 3rd world countries you learn how to dress wounds." "I need to stop the bleeding give me your belt."
She then applies the tourniquet, below the wound. Which if anything, would make him bleed faster. Tourniquets always go between the wound and the heart.
- ConnectionsReferences Casablanca (1942)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1








