Conan the Barbarian

Conan the Barbarian

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Conan the Barbarian

Arnold Schwarzenegger, Ben Davidson, Cassandra Gaviola, Erik Holmey, Franco Columbu

Young Conan's parents are murdered by a horde of vicious warriors who then enslave the young child for years. He is eventually released from slavery and taught the ancient arts of fighting. Transformi...( read more  read more... )ng himself into a killing machine, Conan travels into the wilderness seeking vengeance on the man responsible for his family's murder.

Id: 10905531

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  • November 13, 2009
    ''Do you want to live forever?''

    The epic tale of child sold into slavery who grows into a man who seeks revenge against the warlord who massacred his tribe.

    Arnold Schwarzenegger: Conan

    ''What daring! What outrageousness! What insolence! What arrogance!... I...( read more) salute you.''

    Conan the Barbarian is one of Schwarzenegger's fun movies. Forget the big budget blockbusters and special-effects-tour-de-force-romps of the eighties and nineties. Along with `Pumping Iron,' his bodybuilding documentary, CTB represents the perfect showcase for Arnold's natural talents (including the self-confidence of ten action film stars, a commanding physical presence, and a whip smart sense of humour).
    It does not hurt that Conan the Barbarian follows a predictable, albeit proven formula, the three classical unities of the kung-fu genre: wrong doing ? the snake cult massacres Conan's family; rebirth ? Conan learns the 'riddle of steel' during his years as a pit fighter; and revenge ? Conan goes after the snake cult to avenge the killing of his parents. CTB also boasts several veterans of the screen, including Max Von Sydow and James Earl Jones, and a moving and powerful score by Basil Poledouris.

    ''For no one - no one in this world can you trust. Not men, not women, not beasts. This you can trust.''
    [Points to sword]

    Conan the Barbarian is not restricted or relying upon dialogue or what is spoken between characters. Entire scenes that are central to the plot unfold without Conan even uttering a single line of dialogue. Take for instance the scene where Max Von Sydow charges Conan and his companions with the task of rescuing his daughter; the scene between Conan and Valeria where she tries to talk him out of accepting the rescue mission; the death of Valeria; and the climax where Conan confronts James Earl Jones. But every scene sells itself and Arnold's co-stars are able to fill the void left by Conan's respective,thoughtful silence. After all, Conan is a man of action, not a man of words.
    Instead, Conan the Barbarian is about the unspoken bond between friends, lovers, and family. Arnold is able to convey with stares, smirks, and laughter what lesser actors and films do with rambling, awkward, unbelievable dialogue. Two shining examples of this, less is more approach, include the scenes where Conan cremates his lover and silences the King's daughter with a menacing look.
    When Arnold does speak, his timing has never been better and his delivery never more convincing. Arnold seems completely at ease and comfortable in this role. He does not fumble over dialogue and corny one-liners. If Arnold were to make just one more movie, it should be the third installment in this series.

    Arnold is certainly no Deniro or Spacey, but he is wildly charismatic and easier to understand as a person than either the complex Brando or manical Nicholson. Thus, while Conan the Barbarian never experienced much renowned attention or success, at least it has achieved cult-classic status, which is more than can be said for some dull, forgettable Oscar winners. Anyone who does not like this film simply will not allow themselves to. To Conan the Barbarian detractors, I say give it a chance and do not take it too seriously, Conan the Barbarian is abit of fun, romance, revenge and action all mixed into one fantastical story.

    Mongol General: What is best in life?
    Conan: To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentations of their women.
  • June 16, 2008
    Proof that a few broadswords and leather jerkins go a long way... ;]...what can I say, I own the comic books, so when I sat down to the movies I was nothing less than blown away...
    Conan's parents are brutally murdered by the evil Thulsa Doom. The child is taken and chained to t...( read more)he Wheel of Pain, where he goes around in circles for years, building extraordinary muscles . One day he is set free. He teams up with Subotai the Mongol, and his freind Valeria, Queen of Thieves...
    Valeria herself is everything you could ever hope for in a woman. She is lanky and muscular and a great sport, and she can ride, throw, stab, fence, and climb ropes as good as any man. Offtimes she engages in talk about love, but she quickly recovers herself with cover-up talk about loyalty and betrayal and emotions more central to Conan's experience and maturity...
    With the Mongol and the Queen at his side, Conan ventures forth to seek the evil Thulsa Doom and gain revenge for the death of his parents. This requires him to journey to the mysterious East, where he learns a little quick kung-fu, and then to the mountainside where Doom rules his slave-priests from the top of his Mountain of Power. There are a lot of battles and a few interesting nights at crude wayside inns...
    CONAN THE BARBARIAN is, in fact, a very nearly perfect visualization of the Conan legend, of Robert E. Howard's tale of a superman who lived beyond the mists of time...
    The movie's casting is ideal. Arnold Schwarzenegger as Conan, and Sandahl Bergman as Valeria. Physically, they look like the artist's conceptions of themselves.
    Schwarzenegger's slight Teutonic accent is actually even an advantage, since Conan lived, of course, in the eons before American accents...
    The movie is a triumph of production design, set decoration, special effects and makeup...
  • March 5, 2008
    "Conan, what is best in life?"
    "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women!"
  • November 13, 2007
    The first Arnold movie I saw growing up. And still love it to this day. I just like the atmoshere, and how evrything is all gloom and doom. And Arnold gets revenge for what happens to his family. Just a good movie.
  • August 6, 2007
    wow...I'm speechless
  • December 22, 2009
    Great, Book was better, read Richard Lovelace
  • December 20, 2009
    REALLY ENTERTAINING, ENJOYED EVERY MINUTE OF IT
  • December 19, 2009
    this movie was certainly an inspiration for indian film and television industry of late 80's and early 90's. watch any ramanand sagar show and you will know
  • December 14, 2009
    this movie deserves a remake
  • December 11, 2009
    Arnold hams it up to perfection in this, fights a giant rubber snake, shags a nymphomaniac witch and even learns the true meaning of strength over steel, or some such. Problem is, as fun as it all is, it's done so seriously that it's frequently unintentionally hilarious.

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