The Adventures of Galgameth
The Legend of Galgameth (AKA: The Adventures of Galgameth) | |
---|---|
DVD cover | |
Directed by | Sean McNamara |
Produced by | Martha Chang |
Written by | Michael Angeli |
Screenplay by |
|
Story by | Sang-ok Shin |
Based on |
film Pulgasari by Sang-ok Shin |
Starring |
|
Music by | Richard Marvin |
Cinematography | Christian Sebaldt |
Edited by |
|
Production company |
Sheen Communications |
Distributed by |
Galaxy International Releasing Kidmark |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Country |
|
Language | English |
The Legend of Galgameth is a 1996 Romanian/American children's film and the first feature film project directed by television and film producer/actor Sean McNamara. The film stars Devin Neil Oatway, Johna Stewart and Stephen Macht.[1][2] The movie's script was written by Sang-ok Shin and is a loose remake of his 1985 Godzilla-inspired film Pulgasari, which he had directed while being held in North Korea.[3][4]
Synopsis
In the medieval kingdom of Donnegold, a young prince named Davin (Devin Oatway) lives with his father, the noble King Henryk (Sean McNamara). But that comes to an end when the King's black knight, El El (Stephen Macht), poisons him. As he lays dying, Henryk gives his son a small black statue of a creature. He tells him that it is called "Galgameth", the family guardian of legend. Davin takes it and while he is away mourning his father, El El secretly shatters the statue and takes command, thrusting the kingdom into turmoil under Davin's name! Davin is given the broken statue by a maidservant and cries. The next morning he finds that the statue has become a small creature which he nicknames "Galgy" (Felix Silla and Doug Jones). Brought to life by the prince's tears, Galgameth becomes his friend and guardian as he finds himself chased by El El and in the company of disgruntled peasants who are planning a revolt in order to dethrone the man they think is the source of all their trouble: Prince Davin!
Cast
- Devin Oatway as Prince Davin
- Sean McNamara as King Henryk
- Stephen Macht as El El
- Lou Wagner as Zethar
- Time Winters as Templeton
- James Nixon as Bertrand
- Felix Silla as Little Galgy
- Doug Jones as Big Galgy
- Brendan O'Brien as Heretic
- Tom Dugan as William
- Richard Steven Horvitz as Kinch
- Elizabeth Cheap as Periel
- Patrick Richwood as Grecy
- Ken Thorley as Footy
- Johna Stewart-Bowden as Julia
- Corneliu Țigancu as Zhidao
Production
The production was filmed on locations in Romania,[5] including Bucharest and Zărnești.
Release
Original release was in Spain on November 18, 1996, followed by release in Japan on November 21. Its original Romanian title was Galgameth and had differing titles dependent upon the country and language of later releases. In Germany it was released as Galgameth - Das Ungeheuer des Prinzen. In Spain its video title was as La leyenda de Galgameth and its television release title was Galgameth - El guerrero invencible. In France it was released as Galgameth: L'apprenti dragon. English release titles included both The Legend of Galgameth and the later The Adventures of Galgameth,[6] which was released by Trimark Home Video on July 29, 1997.[7]
References
- ↑ Michel, Roudevitch (September 13, 2000). "Galgameth, l'apprenti dragon". Libération (in French). Retrieved May 8, 2013.
- ↑ Craddock, Jim (2005). Videohound's Golden Movie Retrieve. Thomson/Gale. p. 325. ISBN 0787674702.
- ↑ Shapiro, Michael (April 25, 2005). "A KIM JONG IL PRODUCTION". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
- ↑ Taylor, Ben (2012). Apocalypse on the Set: Nine Disastrous Film Productions. Penguin Books. pp. 168–169. ISBN 146830013X.
- ↑ Sandra Brennan, Rovi. "The Adventures of Galgameth". The New York Times. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
- ↑ Riggs, Thomas (2004). Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television. Volume 54: Gale. p. 89.
- ↑ Fitzpatrick, Eileen (7 June 1997). "Shelf Talk". Billboard 109 (23): 75. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
External links
|