He raised a new generation of necromancers to betray, and one by one, they sniffed out the resting places of the four shards. He had tasted endless power, and could never rest again. Across the sea, Szorlok's power grew once more, like a malevalent cancer. Four riders were sent to far flung corners of the land, with instructions never to return - the secret of each shard would pass with the bearer.įor eighty years, the shards lay quietly, lost to the world. Fearing Szorlok's return, and knowing the power of the Darkspore, the wizards chose to hide each shard where no-one could ever recover them. In the tower of his Order, Gojun and his comrades split the heart asunder once more. Gojun escaped with the Darkspore, the dead coming to life as he rode through the invading Vitalion armies. As Szorlok prepared to place the evil heart within his own chest, crowning himself Lich King reborn, Gojun the Interloper struck him down, aided by three other mighty wizards of his order. It was Gojun Pye who saved the world then. Using the life-force of his minions, Szorlok forged the broken heart whole. But once within the tomb, Szorlok betrayed his followers, unwilling to share his prize. But it was here that Szorlok uncovered his secret - immortality and the power to enslave both the living and the dead, all contained within the four shattered pieces of the Lich King's heart. Szorlok and his acolytes sought out the Lich King's tomb, uncovering it's whereabout after many years of obsessive study and searching, the promise of eternal life driving them relentlessly. His history was lost to all but the most ancient scrolls. Many long years the Lich King lay in his tomb, undisturbed. But Amun Kahn threw even Tek down, and only then, in fear and grief, did the combined will of the Gods unite to destroy the upstart King, and his heart - crystalized by dark and malevalent power - broke into four shards. In wroth, the God of the Forge - Tek - descended from on high to give battle to the Lich King. But better start the franchise with one of the other films.Many thousands of years past, the Lich King Amun Kahn overthrew the world and subjugated its' peoples, bent on destroying the Gods themselves and elavating himself to their station in the heavens. Fighting through creature-infested lands and pursued by bounty hunters, Marek and her company are in a race to recover all the shards of the Darkspore. With Melanie Stone, Adam Johnson, Jake Stormoen, Nicola Posener. Interesting decision that they wrote out Kevin Sorbo for it. Mythica: The Iron Crown: Directed by John Lyde. The Mythica series follows the adventures of Marek, a wizard born with the dark power of necromancy, as she learns to harness the magic that threatens to corrupt her. The series is comprised of five feature films, shot over two years on location in Utah, USA. All in all I'm glad they continued, and kept interest for the final part. Mythica is the most ambitious indie fantasy project ever undertaken. It was fun, and had its place, but had the same mistakes like Two Tower of Lord of the Rings - on its behalf we must confess this one cost way less though. Or the evolving of the world that the dwarf ex-adventurer bartender now gives them their quest. When Teelas sister is murdered and a powerful relic stolen, Marek and her friends face a sinister new enemy - Kishkumen, a foreign mystic bent on reclaiming the Darkspore for his master Szorlok. Or a trick with the knife while pairing (good stunt move). The ending pulled things up for me, despite some details being forgotten, like why the gunpowder on the airship why didn't blow up? How the characters got knowledge on the carriage? None thought the hummer looks pretty anachronistic? And how did that character at the end come back? Did the goddess finally revealed where the hammer is? But then there were details which weight for the good side, like Marek gaining a mage-robe instead of the apprentice-robe she previously wore. The goa'uld/jaffa at the end even worked adequately, although I'm not sure where he disappeared. Really, that was the other thing I praise the installment. But the special effects were used totally perfect, especially for the Sliders-like budget. Maybe they needed some breath between the encounter, I don't know. I never minded the amateur sword-pairing, no. Unfortunately until the ending despite like three different group targeting our crew - one of them I though are the gods, but they were not - the road-movie setup felt lack of action, which is totally strange. On the other hand the knight-guy finally got a decent role written for him, and that was the best thing in the movie. First is first, I felt this part does not stand very well on its own, unlike previous installments. When a powerful relic is stolen, Marek and her friends face a sinister new enemy: Kishkumen, a foreign mystic bent on reclaiming the Darkspore for his master Szorlok.
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