User blog:BadCatMan/Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Session Zero
After everything, I felt I had to review Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. But, to be honest, I'm not sure I can make a non-biased review of this movie. I don't know how, for one. And I'm an editor, I'm like that Marvel character Karnak who can see the flaw in all things, except, instead of using it to break things, I can, if I may, suggest a possible improvement...?

And after seven years monitoring and documenting its production (and it's not even that old), scouring social media for clues, poring over images, reporting on it, researching connections and developing articles, all just to help get the wiki ready ahead of time and feeling I'd banked the wiki's reputation on it, I'd made myself an obsessive fan long before it would be released. And also the person most primed for disappointment in the whole wide world.

It started well before the release, of course. What I'd heard about the tie-in novels made me worry that it'd compressing and dullifying the Realms, making it too much like a generic fantasy. And then I made the mistake of reading Honor Among Thieves: The Junior Novelization, a book that's little more than an abridged early script of the first half of the movie with some sparse and perfunctory prose to connect it, draining all hope of humor and heart, of tension and drama and wonder at the world. Has children's fiction really become so bland and basic? It made the movie seem indistinguishable from garbage, with terrible lines in place of the promised humor.

Nevertheless, I went to work, frantically writing wiki articles to get ahead of the movie, even if the n-th pass through of the novelisation helped matters not at all. I'd spoiled for myself the plot, the jokes, and the surprises, and worn it all into tedium. I wearied myself out, and on the day of the preview screening, I was sick with nervousness all day.

In 2000, I went with a friend, a D&D player who'd been gifting me with classic fantasy novels including Dragonlance, to the first Dungeons & Dragons movie. I, unfamiliar with D&D, thought it was okay, but he complained about the dungeon and the beholder and everything. Now, 22 years later, I'm the D&D fan and going with my brother-in-law (only an ex–Warhammer 40,000 player) to see the latest Dungeons & Dragons movie and I'm wondering if I'm going to be the one complaining about the dungeon and the beholder and everything.

But then, despite it all, I bloody loved it, and now I'm not sure what to think.

So, I say review, but it's more of a metatextual metagame over-analysis. What do I think as a DM and as a Forgotten Realms fan, how does this game play out, and what would I have done as a DM?

Title
First off, the name: Honor Among Thieves. It is one of the more generic titles, just yoinked from an old saying. And yet, it works, the movie does what it says on the tin. Simply calling it "Dungeons & Dragons" would've been terrible, as if it was meant to sum up the entirety of the game and world, an impossible goal. But Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves establishes this movie as one specific story in that game and world. And it needs that to stand on its own. Though I would've preferred Forgotten Realms: Honor Among Thieves, naturally.

Campaign
The plot is, let's be honest, rather thin, as well as a complete mess. That's made especially obvious by the novelisation paring it back to its bare bones, of which there are few. Sure, one can say it's just a D&D adventure, it's just a MacGuffin fetch quest, it doesn't need to be complex. No, it doesn't, but it also doesn't have to be quite this simple. It's hard to think of any D&D adventure module, Forgotten Realms story, or DM worth their dice since the 1980s running one this join-the-dots straightforward and so full of loose ends. The Forgotten Realms can afford to be sprawling and deep. And yet, none of it really matters in the movie itself, where it keeps moving at a good place through its set pieces and introductions and it still feels complete and internally consistent, like there's more story and world there we just can't see, maybe because the players just aren't paying attention. Xenk and Szass Tam illustrate this best, hinting at a larger world and larger threats in fine Forgotten Realms fashion? In the end, do we really need to know what the red horn is or have a name for it? (Well, I do, I need to write a wiki article about it.) In fact, I said the 80s, and that may be the key: this movie is much more of a classic 80s fantasy adventure, like Willow or Krull, comprising a sequence of settings and set pieces strung together, each of them a memorable moment and sometimes introducing a new character, like an old adventure serial—or multiple sessions of a D&D game. Since I grew up on and love those movies, then it works for me.

Nowadays, many movies are one-for-the-price-of-two deals: one storyline split over two parts, each of them often overlong and overpadded enough as it is. (Looking at Dune here, in particular.) Honor Among Thieves is the opposite, being two movies for the price of one. The first is the hunt for the Helm of Disjunction, which the novelisation recounts. The second is the heist of Castle Never itself. Rather than being padded, it's cut right back, rushing through some parts, maybe too much. With a tighter focus on one of the other storyline, I do think it could have relaxed, breathed, explored some characters more, and luxuriated in the Forgotten Realms setting, which is made to be luxuriated in.

The first is the MacGuffin quest. I think this is the ghost of an old script, written and rewritten. If the thread of old summaries in the press and industry publications is correct, then possibly it's the original Chainmail script by David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick, and reportedly rewritten by Michael Gilio. This was apparently great enough to get a D&D movie made in the first place, but not enough to retain in any creditable form in the movie that resulted. But I guess maybe Hollywood is just like that. In any case, as popular as the speak with dead and Themberchaud sequences will be, removing this may have allowed for a cleaner storyline. The Chainmail movie will be one of those lost could-have-beens of D&D history, like Gygax's original movie idea, though likely much much better.

The second is the heist movie, most likely introduced by Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley. The heist works, it's very clever and inventive. With D&D and its all spells, the temptation is often to just roll Hide and Move Silently or Bluff checks or use a spell to teleport in / adopt a disguise / turn into mist / etc., which can make the process of infiltrating an enemy base underwhelming, even tedious, but this storyline understands the idea of magical defenses and limitations too and employs its magic in novel ways to still make that interesting. While a heist is unusual for D&D, it is well within the range of D&D when it comes to getting inside enemy strongholds and making off with loot. It's another novel reinterpretation of the concept.

Clearly, much has been cut, with scenes from the novelisation not appearing in the film, the flashbacks suggesting longer scenes, named characters on IMDB that seem absent, a mask made for Dralas that went unused, and the gold dragon Palarandusk had an animatronic head and a Nerf Blaster made, yet appears nowhere in the movie. Then again, as an invisible, inaudible, intangible dragon, who's to say he isn't there the whole time, helping things along? This movie has got to have one hell of an extended edition or director's cut coming, and I need it.

So, what we have is a D&D campaign formed not from one tailor-made bespoke adventure, but from two different adventure modules, adapted to the setting and cobbled together, some bits dropped, and run one after another, with a lot of improvisation along the way as the PCs had a mad idea to go completely off the rails to find some lost treasure.

You All Meet in a Prison
That said, I feel the heist movie structure works against it. Not the heist idea itself, but the set-up to get there. There's the two leading actors, the stars, Chris Pine as Edgin and Michelle Rodriguez as Holga, going around recruiting a team of skilled people specifically for their heist. That's how a heist movie normally goes, sure. But it's not how D&D ever goes. It sets up an inequality between the player-characters: Edgin and Holga are main characters, who get top billing, most of the screen time, and the heart of the plot; Simon, Doric, and Xenk are supporting characters, who get what's left. While Simon gets a good degree of character development, Doric gets nothing after her introduction, and Xenk can only dominate the few scenes he's in. They balance out eventually, but it's already halfway through the movie. It's all very Hollywood still. In contrast, in a good D&D campaign, PCs are expected to have balanced power, to contribute equally to the plot, and to each have a time to shine, all from the get-go.

Imagine instead that the movie had an ensemble cast, introduced at the same time, given equal time and attention throughout. They could have all met in the tavern, four thieves and other desperate sorts, and been hired by the mysterious hooded figure for their first job together, only for that to go awry as kicks off the movie. They could have met in prison, with now Doric the captured rebel leader and Xenk a knightly paladin sent to recapture them, only to join them.

But, on the other hand, I can't say I've ever run a campaign that kept the same cast throughout; where I didn't have to stop and introduce PCs and write out others because they've ghosted, had real-life issues, or dramas with other players; or that I haven't been the only PC to have stayed in since the start.

So, it seems the hypothetical campaign behind this movie was just as haphazard, with Edgin and Holga two PCs from an earlier adventure continuing on, Simon returning later, Forge an ex-PC brought back as an NPC villain, Doric a new PC introduced, and Xenk is something else.

PCs, NPCs, DMPCs
While it wasn't apparent on the page, the characters are all quite likeable. Even Simon, the sorcerer who makes Charisma his dump stat, is rather more pleasant than his dour concept suggests. The actors' charisma and delivery make all the difference in making those lines work and come alive. Some did feel, I dunno, off or awkward, more like players trying to act in character than experienced actors just acting. Maybe that's deliberate, but a few felt like they could've done with second thoughts as to whether it was something a human would say.

If it was to resemble a typical D&D adventuring party, I would've expected the cast to be all hot 20-something unknowns. While they're all no doubt hot, Grant, Pine and Rodriguez are neither 20-something nor unknown. On second thoughts, though, the older characters aren't bad and imply older players behind them, perhaps introducing younger players to the game. It bridges the generation gap that plagues any long-running fandom. So, let's say Edgin's and Holga's players are the parents or older players and Simon's and Doric's are the kids.

And Xenk is... Who is Xenk? Why is Xenk? Goldstein and Daley said in interviews "He represents the player who takes it too seriously." Too seriously? I'd ask why that's meant to be a bad thing, but I'm the one leading a Forgotten Realms Wiki here. So, no, I don't see commitment to roleplay and rules and investment in the setting and story as necessarily a bad thing. That's the player who respects what the DM wants to do. That's the player encouraging the other players and providing opportunities for them to role-play. I'm a Xenk player, I love to have Xenk players in my game, and I do, and we're all Xenks here. So Xenk is easily my favourite character. So it's a pity he's barely in the movie. He comes late and leaves early. What happened? Was his player unable to continue? Was he not a good fit for the group? That's a shame.

But I'm not sure he's a PC at all. Look at his official stats, he's twice as powerful as the others. He's more than an NPC, that man's a DM PC. He's been introduced to help the PCs in their wild trip into the Underdark (since they've clearly gone off the rails), introduce them to the wider world of the Forgotten Realms setting, and encourage them to step up roleplay more. Movie-wise, it's strange to have some new character step in and show up the leads, but I guess he also serves to contrast with them, illustrating how they're not heroes in the Realms, how they're not that competent. But he still should've left some of those Thayan assassins for the others to fight, as in the novelisation.

And also Themberchaud. I guess he's too high-level for the PCs to fight directly – they can only escape his wrath. Dragons are kind of important to D&D, obviously. They're intelligent, charismatic, powerful, dangerous creatures, and a conversation with one should be a tense scene, a highlight of the film. So it is disappointing that he doesn't get any lines and is reduced to a roaring, clumsy, overweight monster. This would've been a great opportunity for a silver-tongued bard to talk their way out of trouble, or at least try to.

Fortunately, the movie skips right over the tacky cliche of the slutty, horny bard. That's helped by Edgin being a father, not just to Kira but to the younger members of the team. While he calls people 'hun' and 'darling' here and there, in the movie it correctly comes off as a parental affectation. Simon is like a son to him, I guess.

And the 'found family' concept works rather well here, certainly better than in any line or meme from the Fast & Furious films (where they're at best friends who've occasionally tried to kill each other). That's aided by the flashback scenes that really illustrate it, and makes the movie earn its feels. Edgin and Holga partner up well as late-adoptive brother and sister. Simon and Doric don't seem to have anything working between them though.