Skullduggery (1983 film)

Skullduggery
(aka Warlock)
(aka Blood Puzzle)
Directed by Ota Richter
Produced by Ota Richter
Peter Wittman
Written by Ota Richter
Peter Wittman
Starring David Calderisi
Wendy Crewson
Thom Haverstock
Jim Coburn
Kate Lynch
Music by Evzen Illín
Cinematography Robert C. New
Edited by Ian McBride
Production
company
Media Home Entertainment
Wittman/Richter Films
Distributed by Media Home Video
Release dates
1983
Running time
95 minutes
Country  Canada
Language English

Skullduggery (aka Warlock, aka Blood Puzzle) is a 1983 Canadian horror film directed by Ota Richter.[1][2][3]

Plot

The film follows a group of young adults who come together to play a fantasy role playing game, while working at a costume rental store. One of the players is a young man named Adam (Thom Haverstock) who is the descendent of a long line of men who are all cursed by the devil. While working at the community college theater performance a strange magician appears and puts a curse on Adam, forcing him to remember the fate of his ancestors and to make him believe that he really is a warlock.

Increasingly Adam is unable to determine the difference between fantasy and reality and believes that, as a warlock, he is on a quest to kill various people. As the bodies pile up, the local police are baffled and no one suspects that Adam is a deranged serial killer being commanded to kill by the devil.

After playing the role playing game with instructions to kill all the members of the Apostles of Hell before they kill him, Adam attends a costume party hosted by a man named Dr. Evil, who wants Adam to join his cult and also kill most of the female and male party guests. When the police figure out that Adam is the killer, they corner and shoot him in a factory, but his body disappears and leaving a puppet in its place.

At the end of the film, the surviving players are playing a game with a suit of knight's armor seated in Adam's place. The armor comes to life and kills their dungeon master. Upon looking at the body, they learn that their dungeon master was Dr. Evil, and by extension, the devil.

Dungeons & Dragons

The film was released during a time where there was a public backlash against role playing games. Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) games were accused of promoting Satanism and other forms of occult activities among young people.

Partial cast

Release

Originally released in 1983, it was later issued on VHS by Media Home Entertainment, and then licensed to budget label Video Treasures. The film had a commercial re-release on DVD in January 2008 by JEF Films, although the DVD is considered a bootleg release.[4]

Reception

The film was panned, receiving only a 2.3/10 on IMDb.[5]

References

  1. "Skullduggery". British Film Institute. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  2. Lentz, Harris M. (2000). Science Fiction, Horror & Fantasy Film and Television Credits: Filmography 2 (2, revised ed.). McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0951-7. OCLC 9780786409518. Retrieved August 5, 2009.
  3. Stanley, John (2000). Creature features: the science fiction, fantasy, and horror movie guide (illustrated ed.). Berkley Boulevard Books. ISBN 0-425-17517-0. OCLC 9780425175170. Retrieved August 5, 2009.
  4. "Skullduggery on DVD". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2009-08-05.

External links