Fauxnan the Barbarian, Part One

A veritable cornucopia of dodgy barbarian and barbarian-adjacent movies that I have never watched before, and will probably never watch again.
Deathstalker (1983) – USA/Argentina
Inspired by a recent foray into the Conan the Cimmerian Barbarian: The Complete Weird Tales Omnibus, I suddenly had a hankering for more of the same, and so here we are.
Never one to miss an opportunity to cash in on a zeitgeist, Roger Corman saw the response to the the previous year’s Schwarzenegger grunt-a-thon and fast tracked this hokey slice of sword and sorcery, roping in sometime collaborator James Sbardellati to direct Howard R. Cohen’s cut and paste script.
Deathstalker (Rick Hill) is a wandering rogue fighter who loves nothing better than sticking his sword in people, literally and metaphorically speaking. He is quested by a witch to unearth a trio of macguffins in order to topple an evil sorcerer, Munkar (Bernard Erhard), and does so with the help of a diminutive goblin, a swarthy dude bro, and a female warrior whose idea of armour is a pair of knickers and a cloak.
Indeed, knockers and bum cheeks abound in this less than light-hearted romp, and the whole affair grows tiresome remarkably fast. Deathstalker himself isn’t even a fun anti-hero — the only time he is less than plank-like is when he’s sexually assaulting someone — leaving it very hard to root for him, let alone anyone, in this.
4/10

Deathstalker 2 (1987) – USA/Argentina
Due to a multiple-picture deal with the Argentinian studios, and presumably some car payments, producer Roger Corman once again leaped into the Deathstalker world, still smarting that no one would let him make a Conan film. He roped in Jim Wynorski to direct, having just worked together on the altogether fab Chopping Mall (1986), and recast the titular lunk with John Terlesky.
Neil Ruttenberg’s script borrows heavily from an actual Robert E. Howard joint, the short story “A Witch Shall Be Born,” using the central premise of a kingdom overthrown by a doppelganger, and the usurped princess seeking the aid of a sword-swinging lothario.
This one (in an eventual series of three) is remembered quite fondly by sword and sandal enthusiasts, and that’s probably due to its more tongue-in-cheek nature, but this alone isn’t enough to save it. Yes, I enjoyed watching this one more than the first, but it’s still rubbish. Not only that but it pads out several scenes with footage from the first movie (Corman gripping those purse strings like a python in the temple of Set) and several scenes overstay their welcome, especially the Amazonian wrestling match.
It’s not all misery though, the two female leads, Monique Gabrielle in the dual role as the princess and her evil clone, and Maria Socas as the Amazon queen, are both really good and fun to watch. A female Deathstalker would have been excellent, but the 80s weren’t ready for that (don’t get me started on Red Sonja).
5/10

Deathstalker (2025) – USA/Canada
Such is the nature of rose-tinted nostalgia goggles it was inevitable that an homage would be thrown together and quickly crowdfunded by a bunch of folk who remembered the kick-ass Boris Vallejo posters and copious tits of the 80s flicks. This remake is produced by Slash from Guns and Roses, and written and directed by Steven Kostanski, who made the excellent The Void (2016), and therefore got my hopes up.
In this version, Deathstalker (Daniel Bernhardt) loots a macguffin off a battlefield corpse and is instantly cursed with it. His witch friend tells him of a wizard who should be able to break the curse, and so begins his quest, which would ultimately be packed to the rafters with set-piece after set-piece.
Deathstalker teams up with said impish wizard, Doodad (voiced by Patton Oswald), and a feisty thief, Brisbayne (Christina Orjalo, very good). Together they go up against the demonic forces of Necromemnon and his lackey Jotak (Paul Lazenby), and much blood is spilled by all.
From the opening shot (a head is brutally removed from its owner in shocking close-up) I thought I was going to seriously enjoy this version, but as it progressed, and the humour took over, I started to find it more frustrating than enjoyable. This needed the Airplane treatment — instead of Deathstalker cracking gags, he needed to be absolutely straight-laced — let the lampoonary carry on around him.
That said, the production value is great for the budget and the gore is fantastic, so I did have some fun with it, just not as much as I had popped my corn for.
7/10

Masters of the Universe (1987) – USA
Shockingly, I’ve never seen this dollop of American cheese-style product before, but I hardly knew the franchise, being British and 16 when the Filmation series first ran in 1983. Therefore I had no battlecat in the race and really wasn’t interested when the movie burst into cinemas (and flopped, contributing to the death of Cannon Films).
While doing a bit of digging (yes, I actually research these films after I’ve watched them and before I write this drivel), I learned that Mattel really hamstrung the production, which may have had a small part in its eventual dullness, but also, come on, all of Eternia to play with and the budget restricts three quarters of the film to the most deserted square mile of Whittier, California.
Storywise, Skeletor (Frank Langella, excellent) wants a macguffin invented by incredibly annoying, smashburger-faced Gwildor (Billy Barty), and when He-Man (Dolph Lungren, mercifully dubbed) gets accidentally transported to Earth, Skeletor sends his most inept commandos to hunt the device down and kill the blond bore. The macguffin, a portal-summoning synthesizer key, falls into the hands of Julie (Courtney Cox) and her undeserving boyfriend, Kevin (Robert Duncan McNeill), and a great many things get blown up with nary a single shocked reaction from the surrounding (missing) community.
Lots of chasing, cackling, and hair blowing in the wind ensues, but I fell asleep several times and had to keep rewinding it. Sorry to fans of this one.
6/10

The Barbarians (1987) – USA/Italy
A barbarian film from legendary horror-meister Ruggero (Cannibal Holocaust) Deodato? Sign me up! Is what I probably would have said in the late 80s, but being older now and suckered more times than I can remember, I didn’t go into this one with wild abandon. A wise decision as, despite Deodato’s frenetic direction and ability to squeeze every bit of sumptuousness from low-budget sets, the film is ultimately mind-numbing, and not in a good way.
On paper it should have worked; a classic sword and sorcery plot, Richard Lynch chewing the scenery, loin cloths and blood, but the film is hampered by terrible dialogue (and worse dubbing) and a pair of meatheads (David and Peter Paul as the titular Barbarian brothers) who pop veins and shout words with equal redundancy.
The story, which has its own macguffin in the form of a ruby, has a similar element to another film I’ll be reviewing next time (Iron Warrior) and throws forbidden lands, dragons, and torture at us in an attempt to distract us from the brothers, to no avail.
I know this reads like I disliked the film, but to be honest I actually had a fun time. It helped that Michael Berryman was wearing a headband with a single horn on it for much of the proceedings. What a good sport.
7/10
Previous Murky Movie surveys from Neil Baker include:
Fauxnan the Barbarian, Part Two
Probing Questions
My Top Thirty Films
The Star Warses
Just When You Thought It Was Safe
Tech Tok
The Weyland-Yutaniverse
Foreign Bodies
Mummy Issues
Ch-Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes
Monster Mayhem
It’s All Rather Hit-or-Mythos
You Can’t Handle the Tooth
Tubi Dive
What Possessed You?
See all of Neil Baker’s Black Gate film reviews here. Neil spends his days watching dodgy movies, most of them terrible, in the hope that you might be inspired to watch them too. He is often asked why he doesn’t watch ‘proper’ films, and he honestly doesn’t have a good answer. He is an author, illustrator, teacher, and sculptor of turtle exhibits.
Does that last poster honestly say: “The Barbarian Brothers as – THE BARBARIANS” ? Wow. Talk about not getting your hopes up. I can hardly get my jaw up.
To be fair, they did warn us.
Has anyone warned you that there is a Deathstalker 3? On the bright side, that is the one that MST3K watched, so the sanity loss comes with a lot of laughs. I saw it as part of the 2025 Turkey Day marathon.
Mercifully, I did not find it for inclusion in this watchathon 🙂
0_o I remember that “Masters of the Universe” movie. Why do I remember that movie? I was barely conscious when it came out.
…This is going to bother me.
Thanks for the heads-up on the Deathstalkers. Was considering trying those, recently.
I was barely conscious while I was watching it.
I’ll probably watch the new Deathstalker someday, as a reminder of the bad old days of grad school.
The Barbarians was the only video in the small fantasy/SF section of the rental store that I couldn’t bring myself to watch.
You have greater self control than I !
On the other hand, the Deathstalker sci-fi series was very good…at least the first few novels.
I’ll add them to the TBR pile!
Love this collection of movies! Not so much the “new” Deathstalker – from what I’ve heard it’s lacking core components of a proper Deathstalker movie that is topless women and … aggressive romance…so not going to see it soon, too many memories shattered. Sad that Corman died, was working on a proposal for a legit Deathstalker sequel – but probably will make it (different name) with Ai moviemaking much quicker than I dare estimate. Anyone ever see SwordBow? (dodges the “aaaarrrg!” and fruit and axes thrown) Just something to throw in, since Eugene R. noted there’s also a 3rd Deathstalker movie – Death Stalker is a legit “Conan Wanna-Be” he openly admits it in one of the deep intellectual conversations with a pretty lady when he isn’t trying to mate with her…
Then we go to the MOTU movie – this is what happens when a movie gets its budget cut in HALF during production but “The show must go on!” – “Why…?” – “Well, we don’t get paid if it don’t.” – “The SHOW must go ON!” – that’s been a good motivator. Turned ROM and Micronauts into some of the BEST and long term comics in modern history – the writers/artists were “Uh, they don’t make the toys no more, company is bankrupt, but Marvel paid… Shhhh! We keep doing the book till the pull the plug and we do the BEST book we can…!” and then it turned out Marvel was waiting for them to come in to quit that but demand work elsewhere but they did such good jobs it was making serious $ vs a bad loss so they never pulled the plug…
There’s a neat comic book series called “Concrete” published by Dark Horse, written and masterfully drawn by Paul Chadwick. One of my favorite episodes is “Fragile Creature” where Concrete – imagine “The Thing” from Marvel if IRL somehow makes extra $ working on a movie studio as both a living forklift and stunt double/assistant. I’d frankly rather see “Rulers of the Omniverse” their copyright dodge made to avoid copyWRONG problems with Mattel/MOTU when they parodied them as a REAL movie than whatever Marvel Cinematic Universe with MOTU kinda stapled on it comes out this summer. But the comic was a tribute to the effort to make even a B-movie, a low effort movie and things like the expense of a scifi/fantasy one (especially before modern CG which it predicted!) and the devastation of a budget cut and creative solutions.
Good info. Thanks for adding to the mythology of these flicks 🙂
One of those weekends, when I have a lot of time and a lot of weed I need to roll up my sleeves and delve into the Deathstalker movies.
Good luck, skipper.
I’ll do it for science!