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The 13th Warrior
The 13th Warrior
A Muslim ambassador exiled from his homeland joins a group of Vikings, initially offended by their behavior but growing to respect them. As they travel together, they learn of a legendary evil closing in and must unite to confront this formidable force.
rating
6.67
runtime
103 min

Release

1999-08-13

Cast

Antonio Banderas
Antonio Banderas
as Ahmed Ibh Fahdlan
Diane Venora
Diane Venora
as Queen Weilew
Dennis Storhøi
Dennis Storhøi
as Herger (Joyous)
Vladimir Kulich
Vladimir Kulich
as Buliwyf
Omar Sharif
Omar Sharif
as Melchisidek
Anders T. Andersen
Anders T. Andersen
as Wigliff (King's Son)
Richard Bremmer
Richard Bremmer
as Skeld (Superstitious)
Tony Curran
Tony Curran
as Weath (Musician)
Mischa Hausserman
Mischa Hausserman
as Rethel (Archer)
Neil Maffin
Neil Maffin
as Roneth
Asbjørn 'Bear' Riis
Asbjørn 'Bear' Riis
as Halga (Wise)
Clive Russell
Clive Russell
as Helfdane (Fat)
Daniel Southern
Daniel Southern
as Edgtho (Silent)
Oliver Sveinall
Oliver Sveinall
as Haltaf (Boy)
Sven Wollter
Sven Wollter
as King Hrothgar
Albie Woodington
Albie Woodington
as Hyglak (Quarrelsome)
John DeSantis
John DeSantis
as Ragnar (Dour)
Erick Avari
Erick Avari
as Caravan Leader
Maria Bonnevie
Maria Bonnevie
as Olga
Richard Ooms
Richard Ooms
as One-Eyed Old Man
Dylan Gray Woodley
Dylan Gray Woodley
as Screaming Boy
Bjørn Ove Pedersen
Bjørn Ove Pedersen
as Wulfgar (The Boy-Messenger)
Scott Elam
Scott Elam
as Herald
Ghoncheh Tazmini
Ghoncheh Tazmini
as Shaharazhad (Arabian Beauty)
John 'Bear' Curtis
John 'Bear' Curtis
as Norseman
Andrew Kavadas
Andrew Kavadas
as Norseman
Jeremy Van der Driesen
Jeremy Van der Driesen
as Arab General
Layla Alizada
Layla Alizada
as Serving Girl
Alex Zahara
Alex Zahara
as Norseman
Joe Bulatti
Joe Bulatti
as Shaharazhad's Husband
Mina E. Mina
Mina E. Mina
as The Caliph
Mona Storhøi
Mona Storhøi
as Sacrificial Woman
Turid Balke
Turid Balke
as Oracle (Old Woman)
Suzanne Bertish
Suzanne Bertish
as Hulda
Susan Willis
Susan Willis
as Wendol Mother
Kristen Cloke
Kristen Cloke
as Wendol Mother (uncredited)
Yolande Bavan
Yolande Bavan
as Wendol Mother Companion
Clare Lapinskie
Clare Lapinskie
as Freyda
Tarik Batal
Tarik Batal
as Arab Page
Brett Reyez
Brett Reyez
as Caravan Lieutenant
Akesh Gill
Akesh Gill
as Serving Girl
Natalia MacLeod
Natalia MacLeod
as Serving Girl
Kaaren de Zilva
Kaaren de Zilva
as Serving Girl
Sven-Ole Thorsen
Sven-Ole Thorsen
as Would Be King
Alaina Lander
Alaina Lander
as Sleeping Girl
Al Hachlaf
Al Hachlaf
as Arab General
Brian Jensen
Brian Jensen
as Norseman
Michael Jonsson
Michael Jonsson
as Norseman
Mark Acheson
Mark Acheson
as Norseman
Gunnar Skjavestad
Gunnar Skjavestad
as Norseman on Ship
Malcolm Jolly
Malcolm Jolly
as Wulfgar Retainer
Owen Walstrom
Owen Walstrom
as Wendol Guard
Greg Michaels
Greg Michaels
as Sword Master
REVIEWS
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Wuchak

**_Good Viking Adventure -- Could've Been Great_** The story of "The 13th Warrior" (1999) comes from Michael Crichton's novel "The Eaters of the Dead" which combines the legend of Beowulf with a historical account of an Arab diplomat who meets and dwells with the Vikings after being banished from his homeland due to an adulterous liaison. Antonio Banderas stars as the Arab while the hulking Vladimir Kulich heads the Viking cast in the Beowulf role of Buliwyf (pronounced in the film BULL-vie). Speaking of Kulich, he would've made for an excellent Mighty Thor back in the day! The plot of the film is great: Once Banderas meets up with the Vikings, they run afoul of a mysterious brutal tribe from the deep woods. Banderas is selected as the lone non-Viking to assist the 12 Norsemen in ridding the communities of the threat, hence "the 13th warrior." The cast, characters, story, locations (Campbell River, Vancouver Island), sets, costumes, score (Jerry Goldsmith), and cinematography are all of the highest order. At a little over an hour and a half the film moves along briskly with a lot of action. Make no mistake, "The 13th Warrior" is a Class A film, but some story elements seem to be underdeveloped. This is probably due to the conflict Michael Crichton had with director John McTiernan. Crichton insisted on reshoots and cut at least 30 minutes of McTiernan's work, reportedly important character-developing scenes. We see this in the very prologue of the film: The story of Banderas' banishment from his homeland due to his indiscretions is literally relayed in a matter of a couple minutes. And at the 8 minute mark we are introduced to the Vikings with very little mystery and zero suspense build-up. The contrast of the sophisticated Arab culture with the coarse, rugged Norsemen is great, but I would have enjoyed seeing these characters fleshed-out a bit more. After all, the more we know the individuals, the more we care about what ultimately happens to them. Which brings us to the final 30 minutes of the film involving Banderas and the Vikings infiltrating the malevolent tribe's stronghold and a final attack on a Viking village. The visuals of these scenes are awe-inspiring but they fly by so quickly that the viewer is left disoriented and strangely uninvolved, not to mention unmoved by the story's outcome. All this reveals that "The 13th Warrior" COULD have been an outstanding 140-minute Viking epic, along the lines of "Troy" (2004); instead we are left with a brisk, action-oriented, near-throwaway Viking popcorn flick. I would love to see a Director's Cut some day but Vladimir Kulich opines that it will unfortunately never happen. Nonetheless, I appreciate the film as is. It's a good Viking adventure flick that's professionally done, despite the post-production problems. It's one of those films that gets better with each viewing, probably because everything flies by so quickly on initial plays. Despite it's flaws, "The 13th Warrior" isn't too far from rivaling Kirk Douglas' brilliant 1958 "The Vikings" as one of the greatest Viking films ever made. A Director's Cut could possibly even topple "The Vikings" from its lofty, coveted perch. The film was shot in British Columbia: Campbell River on Vancouver Island, Williams Lake and Pemberton, British Columbia. GRADE: B-/B.

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mooney240

**Overall: Ignore the reviews. The 13th Warrior is the best Viking epic of all time!** The greatest historical Viking battle epic you never heard of. Just like Jurassic Park and Westworld, The 13th Warrior is based on a Michael Crichton book and boasts an incredible action director, John McTiernan (Die Hard, Predator), Antonio Banderas as the leading man at the top of his career, excellent practical effects and beautiful sets and costumes. Yet, critics obliterated the film, and it failed at the box office, becoming one of the biggest box office flops of all time. I have no idea how this happened or why the reviews are so bad because this is an EXCELLENT movie. The battle scenes in The 13th Warrior are in league with other action epics like Braveheart, The Last Samurai, or Kingdom of Heaven. The story is similar to 300, where a small band of warriors face impossible odds and mixes a little horror with fantastic action and great character development. I’m not sure how The 13th Warrior ended up in the garbage can, but it belongs on the top shelf with the best action epics.

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Geronimo1967

This is my kind of film, and so despite that rather dodgy casting of Antonio Banderas - indeed, the pretty ropey casting throughout - I still rather enjoyed it. Banderas is a gentle poet whose eye wanders at the court of the Caliph. That earns him a new job as ambassador to the Northmen and so off he rides, with his sagely friend "Melchisadek" (a few scenes from Omar Sharif). His arrival at their camp is greeted with indifference until a messenger arrives regaling them with horror stories of a terror back home. Their soothsayer advises that thirteen men must return home to combat this evil - but the last of this warlike baker's dozen must not be of their race. Oops - wrong place, wrong time for Antonio and off he sets into an enjoyably paced series of set-piece action scenarios with a Norse theme to them. Luckily, he befriends the charismatic "Herger" (an enthusiastic but pretty hopeless Dennis Storhøi) and intrigues the new king "Buliwyf" (Vladimir Kulich) with his ability to "speak sounds" (write!) and together they gradually bond in the face of their menacing enemy. It's not a great film, no - the dialogue is poor and the acting really isn't up to much ether but there is loads of swordplay, flaming arrows and the whole thing is generally quite light-hearted and good-humoured. This mythology always lends itself well to a good story and the (underplayed) clashes of culture between the rough and ready warriors and their more refined guest adds a little richness to the plot. You won't remember it afterwards, and I bet Banderas probably doesn't want to - but it doesn't hang around and kills an hour and an half easily enough.