The heroes of any Dungeons & Dragons game are at a loss if they don't have a villain to battle. Thankfully, the Dungeons & Dragons film has found a villain in British actor Hugh Grant, according to a .
Information about the is scarce at the moment, aside from casting information. Along with as the villain, actress Sophia Lillis (It) will join the previously-announced cast members, including (Star Trek franchise), (Fast & Furious franchise), Justice Smith (Paper Towns, Detective Pikachu), and (Bridgerton).
Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley will direct and write the film. The duo directed Game Night and wrote Spider-Man: Homecoming, among other credits, and were to the much-delayed . Paramount and Hasbro are co-producing the film with eOne as distributor.
We're most curious to see just what Paramount and Hasbro, the parent company of D&D maker , imagine a Dungeons & Dragons movie to be. To the tens of millions of people playing the game, is a descriptor that has roughly as much meaning as "fantasy story setting."
The official worlds of Dungeons & Dragons, including properties like Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms, and Ravenloft, bring a rich history of characters and places, while the greater concept is used by Dungeon Masters and players to tell any manner of fantasy-themed story. Unless Goldstein and Francis Daley give us something that uses a specific Dungeons & Dragons world or plays with the concept of a roleplaying game in meaningful ways, we may be in for fairly generic fare. That's despite the encouraging casting, which already has more going for it than the Dungeons & Dragons film starring Jeremy Irons and Marlon Wayans released in 2000.
The Dungeons & Dragons film does not yet have a release date, and definitely won't make the 2021 release that was going around .
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