Another one that made it's presence felt in many D&D games at the time. In fact, I can think of about 4 or 5 different beastmaster classes off the top of my head now.
It has been forever since I have seen this one, so lets see what we have here.
We have a young Rip Torn as our bad guy Maax ("May Axe"). Some scantily clad witches tell that King Zad's unborn son will kill him. One of the witches is none other than the future Mrs. Wayne Gretzky, Janet Jones.
The witches transfer the unborn baby to a cow. Here they attempt to sacrifice him but are stopped by Ben Hammer. He takes the baby to raise as his own.
Soon young Dar shows a strong affinity to animals. And sooner again we have older Dar in the form of mulletted 80s stalwart Marc Singer. But he gets no time to enjoy it when his village is attacked by Rip Torn's men. Maax sees Dar's brand from the witches but before he can get him Dar's dog drags him to the wilderness. Dar returns to his village (seeing out of the eyes of an eagle) only to find everyone dead. Even his dog died trying to save him.
We get an 80s training montage of Dar training and learning how to talk to animals, including some ferrets. Mind you we are now a half-hour into the movie and Singer's most significant dialog has been with the ferrets.
I can say it is much slower than I remember, but not as cheesy. Oh, it is still cheesy, but not as bad as I remember. I think I was getting it confused with some Roger Corman flicks. Credit to the movie, they use a lot of real animals and Marc Singer seems really comfortable with them. Today they would just use CGI.
The Beastmaster may have supernatural powers but that doesn't mean he isn't above using them to steal (the now sadly late) Tanya Robert's clothes or scare her a bit with his lion.
There are some cool winged "bird-men" or something, but Dar doesn't fight them.
Dar finds a city "Aruk" with a ziggurat (a model, but not a bad one) and the road is lined with dead people long before the same was seen in Meereen in Game of Thrones. Rip Torn is here sacrificing children but Dar saves one with his eagle. An effective scene, it would have been better if the eagle had saved the child and tore out Rip Torn's eyes or something, but we still have an hour to go. Plus Dar returns the child, so I guess the eagle was busy. Pretty solid good vs evil lines are being drawn here.
John Amos shows up as Seth. He appears to be some sort of Monk. This is one of the roles he took after Good Times. I always like John Amos, he should have been a much bigger star than he was.
The undead guards are kind of cool too. Even little Kodo got to be a hero in the end.
This was much better and more fun than I recall, to be honest. Nice to have this kind of surprise really
Gaming Content
Lots really.
Ring of Scrying. This ring has an eye set into it like a gem. Any spellcaster that can scry (Magic-users, witches) can see through this ring using a scrying medium such a pool, mirror, or crystal ball. Witches will give these to servants and cowans so they can literally keep an eye on them. Damage to the ring though will damage the witch viewing through it.
Beastmaster classes. I covered these a while back in a Class Struggles.