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Desert Warrior
Desert Warrior

Desert Warrior

20262h 7m★ 5.7履歴戦争アクションドラマ

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

作品考察・見どころ

本作の真骨頂は、見渡す限りの広大な砂漠を舞台に繰り広げられる、圧倒的なスケールの映像美と肉体的なアクションの融合にあります。ルパート・ワイアット監督は、過酷な自然環境を単なる背景ではなく、登場人物の運命を左右する巨大な意志として描き出しました。アンソニー・マッキーが放つ静かな闘志と、ベン・キングズレーの重厚な威厳が火花を散らす瞬間、物語は歴史の枠を超えた普遍的な叙事詩へと昇華されます。 抑圧に対する抵抗と、名誉を懸けた信念の衝突は、現代を生きる私たちの魂をも激しく揺さぶります。一人の女性の勇気が部族を動かし、やがて巨大な帝国へと立ち向かう姿には、個の力が歴史を塗り替えるという希望に満ちたメッセージが込められています。砂塵の中に刻まれる人間の尊厳、そして映像でしか表現し得ない地平線まで続く情熱のドラマを、ぜひその目で目撃してください。

興行成績

製作費: $150,000,000 (225億円)

興行収入: $742,066 (1億円)

推定収支: $-149,257,934 (-224億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

予告・トレイラー

キャスト

アンソニー・マッキー
アンソニー・マッキー
Hanzala
Aiysha Hart
Aiysha Hart
Princess Hind
サミ・ブアジラ
サミ・ブアジラ
Hani
シャールト・コプリー
シャールト・コプリー
Jalabzeen
ベン・キングズレー
ベン・キングズレー
Emperor Kisra II
غسان مسعود
غسان مسعود
King Numan
لميس عمار
لميس عمار
Medicine Woman
Ramsey Faragallah
Ramsey Faragallah
Ibn Qabisah
Saïd Boumazoughe
Saïd Boumazoughe
Samir
Younes Bouab
Younes Bouab
Aasif

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Rupert Wyatt

脚本: Erica Beeney / Gary Ross / Rupert Wyatt

音楽: Rami Basahih / Dan Levy

制作: Jeremy Bolt / Charbel Tayeh / Dennis Berardi

撮影監督: Guillermo Garza

制作会社: MBC Studios / JB Pictures / AGC Studios / Studio Mechanical

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Sierbahnn
Sierbahnn
★ 5

So much money, so little to show for it. Obviously this movie looks great. Piles of money has been shoveled at it, but mere budget does doesn't make a good movie. And this is pretty dull. I am surprised at the lack of magnetism from the lead and the supporting cast isn't doing much to help him. Overall it's just pretty drab and the excitement feels very forced when it appears. I can't in good conscience recommend this, but I can't give it lower than five because of how good it actually looks even though it isn't that enjoyable.

JPRetana
JPRetana

Desert Warrior (2025) is set “1500 years ago” in Arabia, “where tribes fight over territory and water.” And where everybody speaks English. I can only imagine how much more fighting there would have been if each tribe had its own language or dialect. According to the opening intertitles, “In a bid to take control[,] Emperor Kisra II of the Sassanid Empire demands all tribal Kings [sic] turn over their daughters as concubines. Those [sic] that refuse are hunted into harsh desert where only the strongest survive.” The strongest and the computer-generated. I’d wonder how that counterintuitive recipe for disaster could possibly help Khosrow (oops, I meant “Kisra”) consolidate his power, but it sounds like he already has plenty of it, if he truly is able to issue and enforce such a decree. It also sounds like a bunch of taurus cacas — a variation of the equally spurious droit du seigneur stuff from Braveheart. There must be several documented causes of conflict endemic to that time and place; the film itself mentions two that are very plausible: water and land. Why make something up wherein the conflict boils down to the heroes and villains fighting over a girl? And the answer is, because it’s a convenient narrative shorthand that stands for three things. First, it lets us know that Kisra is a power-hungry tyrant — which Ben Kingsley’s can-I-have-my-money-now cameo isn’t enough to establish. Second, it reveals that Hanzala (Anthoy Mackey) may lust after gold but is also a Thief with a Heart of Gold when he protects Princess Hind (Aiysha Hart). And last but not least, #MeToo. Kisra II gets to be — retroactively and, I suspect, undeservedly — a patron devil of dirty old men because he had more than one wife at a time and God forbid we fail to project modern sensibilities onto ancient history regardless of what was customary back then. What Desert Warrior lacks in the way of a sense of time, it makes up for with a sense of place, at least during the first half of the movie. The desert looks as harsh as advertised, and the action sequences feel of a piece with the environment. It’s as though the filmmakers disregarded the past fifty years in order to deliver as historically inaccurate yet authentic looking an experience as the epics of old. Those were my thoughts until they showed us a “panoramic” view of Ctesiphon, the historical capital of Iranian empires. I know seventh-century Ctesiphon is not a place you can send the second unit to get some establishing shots; nevertheless, they could have recreated it like Olivier recreated London in the opening of Henry V. If the “exterior” looks like something out of 300, the interiors, specifically Kisra’s court/arena, look like something out of Caligula. Oddly, Kingsley gives a sedate performance when he should be hamming it up Malcolm McDowell style. There are several other shots and scenes that we may generously call “composites” throughout the film — mainly landscapes, armies, and a herd of war elephants that made me yearn for the documentary-like realism of Babar — none of which holds a candle to the movie’s primary aesthetic. Desert Warrior ends with a caption informing us that Kisra II was “poisoned by an unknown assassin. There are those who believe it was a concubine.” Is that so? Who exactly believes that? Well, you know, “those.”

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