Monday, October 14, 2024

Monstrous Mondays: The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendiums

 I have been covering the AD&D 2nd Ed version of Ravenloft all this month. I have also been covering the the Forgotten Realms and currently in the AD&D 2nd Edition era. One thing they both have in common is that a few of the books feature new monsters in AD&D 2nd Monstrous Compendium format.

I reviewed the Ravenloft Monstrous Compendiums sometime back. Since I have been reviewing the various books I have been printing out the Monstrous Compendium pages and adding them to my three-ring binder for Ravenloft.

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendiums

As I run across a monster page for these reviews OR from Dragon magazine in my This Old Dragon feature, I print them out (or cut them out as the case may merit) and add them to my binder.

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

The Ravenloft Monstrous Compendium pages

It has taken 30+ years but I feel that the Monstrous Compendium concept is finally living up to its potential for me.

I have been doing the same thing with my Forgotten Realms monsters as I talked about a while back.

Again, I might start mining my other MCs to see what would fit here. I already have one filled with demons and devils, so I wont add those, but I am considering taking the Death Knight from Krynn and putting in this one.

The truth is I am not likely to play AD&D 2nd ed Ravenloft again. BUT my son is running his 5e group through Castle Amber using AD&D 1st ed. So it is possible I could run an AD&D 2nd Ed game again one day. I have mentioned that I am running an AD&D 2nd Ed Forgotten Realms game with my oldest, though we have not played in a while. So I guess never say never.

Despite my concerns with Ravenloft under AD&D 2nd ed, it was my game for the 90s. 

In any case I feel like an archivist in some dusty library, collecting tomes for my own pleasures. 

This is another entry for my RPG Blog Carnival for October!


RPG Blog Carnival


Review: Masque of the Red Death and Other Tales

Masque of the Red Death and Other Tales
Very few games or game products have had *lasting* profound effects on my gaming. Oh sure there have been a LOT of great games that I have played or used over the years, but only a handful that have been a sea change for me. 

They are: 
  1. The AD&D 1st Ed Monster Manual
  2. D&D Basic Moldvay Edition
  3. 1st Edition Chill
  4. CJ Carella's WitchCraft RPG
  5. Masque of the Red Death and Other Tales
This last game combined everything I wanted into one game. Horror? Check. AD&D? Check? Gothic Victorian Earth? Double check.

For the longest time, it was the perfect game for me. I had to write an entire other game, Ghosts of Albion, just to get what I wanted, and then again with NIGHT SHIFT.

But before I go there, let's go back—not to the 1890s, but rather to the 1990s, when this game came out.
In the theaters, we saw Lost Boys, Near Dark, The Crow (okay, not a vampire movie, but still. And the 1994 version, not the 2024 one), and most of all, a big-screen adaptation of Dracula that was the most faithful to the book yet. In the game stores, Vampire: the Masquerade reigned supreme. AD&D had started the decade doing well but had begun to flounder by the middle. Soon, it would be all but dead; we didn't know it then.  Amidst all of this, we were given the gift of Gothic Earth. 

Masque of the Red Death and Other Tales 

by William W. Connors, D. J. Heinrich, Shane Lacy Hensley, Colin McComb.
Art by Ned Dameron, Stephen Fabian, Robh Ruppel, David C. Sutherland, III.

Masque of the Red Death and Other Tales is nominally released under the Ravenloft line and you will need one of the Ravenloft core books to be able to play this along with the AD&D 2nd Edition rules.  However if you know the AD&D rules well enough you might be able to get by.  The premise of the game it rather a simple one. What if the Dark Powers from Ravenloft found their way to Earth?  Well...I should state out and out that they never actually say that, but imply it rather heavily.  The is a dark, malignant force controlling things on Earth, known here as The Red Death, and this Earth of the 1890s certainly has a lot more in common with Ravenloft.

Pretty much from the time it was published to the onset of the new 3rd Edition rules, Masque of the Red Death was my campaign world of choice.  I still played AD&D2 in Ravenloft, or rather, I ran AD&D2 in Ravenloft, but the lines between Ravenloft proper and "Gothic Earth" became very, very blurry.

For this review, I am considering my original boxed set from the 1990s and the PDFs from DriveThruRPG.

This package from DriveThruRPG includes five PDFs, which correspond to the four books and the DM's screen found in the Boxed Set.

Book I is the main Masque of the Red Death book.  It is 130 pages of a high quality, OCR scan.  Some the images are fuzzy, but I feel that is more due to the source images rather than the scan itself.  The scan comes in at just over 35 meg.

We begin with an overview of what this campaign guide is about.  I might be mistaken, but this is the first official AD&D product to take place on Earth.   This followed up with a history of Gothic Earth.  Things began to go downhill for everything around 2700 BC when Imhoptep (yes, same as the Mummy movies) began experimenting with darker magics.  The next dozen or so pages bring us to the present day (1890s).  The history is a fast read and I would not ignore it. It sets the tone for the entire game.

Chapter II details character creation.  There are different methods used than the PHB to reflect that characters are not your sword wielding barbarians of a bygone age.  So characters are more average.
There are rough parallels to all the classic AD&D classes, Soldiers, Adepts, Mystics, and Tradesmen.  The AD&D Proficiency system is used here as well.  Interestingly the system seems make more sense here (since skills are really what sets characters apart) but also shows its wear and tear.

Chapter IV also details money and Equipment. Interestingly, this is one of the few Victorian-era games in which the default currency is American Dollars rather than Pounds Sterling.
It should be of note that this is also the book that adds guns to AD&D2.  Quite a number of guns are detailed here as well.

Chapter V covers magic, and you need the Player's Handbook for this section.

Chapter VI covers the changes to combat.
Getting back to what really makes this special is Chapter VII, An Atlas of Gothic Earth. I should point out at this point that the large poster-sized map that came with the boxed set is not included here. It gives a brief overview of the world. This section is done much better in the full-fledged product that shares its name.

The first Appendix covers various character kits.  If you remember 2e at all, you remember kits. Quite a few interesting ideas are detailed, but you could also do these with the base four classes and good roleplaying.
 
Appendix II covers some villains of Gothic Earth. There are plenty of old favorites here and some new takes on old characters.  Though I will admit the one thing that still gets on my nerves is Moriarty re-done as a Rakshasa.  In my games, he was human. And yes, Dracula is there as well.

Finally, Appendix III covers the adventuring of Gothic Earth.

Book II is an adventure in three parts by future Pinnacle Entertainment head honcho Shane Hensley and features the rock star of Gothic fiction, Dracula. What is the advantage of this PDF over my boxed set copy? I can print it out and make changes to it. Yeah, it is a good adventure, but it is a pastiche of Hammer and Stoker's original work.

Book III is a Jack the Ripper adventure, Red Jack. Unlike Moriarty's change into a supernatural creature, this adventure makes "Jack" into something more mundane.  Normally, I would be fine with this, but the name of the adventure itself and some of the elements BEGS it to be tied to the old Star Trek episode The Wolf in The Fold and Redjac.

Book IV is The Red Death, an adventure based on elements of the Edgar Allen Poe story.  Some details have been changed and added, but the spirit is the same.  Again, I am tempted to make the main antagonist, Prospero, the Prospero.

Book V is the DM's screen.

Part of me wants to get the Print on Demand version, just to see how it is, but I know it will not live up to my boxed set. 

In any case, boxed set, PDF, Print on Demand, this is still one of my all-time favorite Ravenloft products and changed how I wanted to play my games. I spent a lot of time talking to the late Johnathan Thompson and we both agreed had it not been for MotRD there would not have been his Gaslight nor my Ghosts of Albion games. 

Advent-ure Dice: Day 14

  Day 14

Advent-ure Dice Day 14

Orange spider d%, but no spiders on it.


Sunday, October 13, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: Dracula Night

 Decided that a Dracula night was in order. I wanted to watch "Last Voyage of the Demeter" and "Renfield" and thought I'd throw "Bram Sotker's Dracula" in as well. 

Last Voyage of the the Demeter (2023) Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) Renfield (2023)

The Last Voyage of the Demeter (2023)

This movie takes the log of the ill-fated Demeter and turns it into a full-length movie. Not a bad concept really, and certainly enough here for a movie. There are some good bits here. Liam Cunningham (Davos Seaworth in Game of Thrones) is the captain of the Demeter with David Dastmalchian as the first mate. New characters include Anna (Aisling Franciosi) as Dracula's "road trip snack," and Corey Hawkins as Cambridge-schooled doctor Clemens. 

We know the story here. Dracula charters The Demeter to London with 50 boxes of earth. He kills everyone on board, and the boat runs ashore.

In this one, Anna and Clemens survive, only for Anna to die when sunlight hits her. Clemens vows to hunt Dracula down, but we know he is not successful. 

Dracula is played by Spanish actor Javier Botet under a lot of make-up. 

A couple of points. The movie takes place in 1897, the same year Dracula was published, but you know my issue with that

Also, the main character is named Clemens, and the dog on the boat is named Huck, short for Huckleberry.  This is a neat little nod given what I have said about Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain's relationship with Bram Stoker

Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)

Honestly, I have lost track how many times I have seen this movie. A couple of notes on this viewing.

One. It also takes place in 1897. I guess that can't be helped. Two. Honestly, we gave Keanu Reeves too much grief when this came out. He is nowhere near as bad as I thought he was or remembered. The same is true for Winona Ryder. Time has been better for them both. I mean who doesn't love Keanu Reeves and where would "Stranger Things" be without Joyce Byers?

Three. I am still not a fan of the "Immortal Beloved" subplot. Why can't Dracula just be the evil asshole he is in the book? It worked so well for other Draculas. 

Four. Some of the script dialog is a bit cringey. 

Still, this is one of the best Dracula movies. It could also be better.

The scene with Dracula as a bat-creature (after he feeds on Mina) is very much like the bat-creature in "Last Voyage of the Demeter."

I kinda wonder what Mina would have been like had she joined Dracula. I think more interesting that what we saw in "League of Extraordinary Gentlemen."

Renfield (2023)

Ok. This one. First off, Nicolas Cage as Dracula? Oh HELL YES. This movie is crafted as sequel to the 1931 Dracula starring Bela Lugosi.  Nicholas Hoult, who is pretty much brilliant in everything he does (see "The Great" where he played Peter III of Russia), and Awkwafina playing...well Awkwafina (but that is fine it works here). 

This movie has Renfield still serving Dracula into the 2000s. It is silly and maybe one of the bloodiest movies I have ever seen, but it is just so much fun.

Dishonorable Mention: Dracula's Guest (2008)

Thought I'd make a night of it and watch this one as well. But wow, is it really bad. I mean terrible. It is late and frankly I just can't sit through this one. So not finishing it, but not counting it either. 

Featured Monster: Vampire

None of these movies contributed to the 1977 Monster Manual, obviously. But Dracula, the novel, and earlier movies did. The truth is that while there are plenty of pulp-era vampires, you can go wrong with Dracula as your model.

Vampire


October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 20
First Time Views: 10

Monster Movie Marathon


Advent-ure Dice: Day 13

  Day 13

Advent-ure Dice Day 13

Advent-ure Dice Day 13

A green d4. I don't have a complete set yet of all one color, but I am getting there.


Saturday, October 12, 2024

October Horror Movie Challenge: The Day of the Triffids (1963)

Day of the Triffids

 I was looking back at some of the movies I have watched and it dawned on me that I have never reviewed Day of the Triffids. My wife mentioned it to me the other day and I told her yes, I have seen many times, but I checked and I have never reviewed it. Odd. I did a monster write-up for it years ago, but never an October Horror Movie Challenge.  Let's change that.

The Day of the Triffids (1963)

A meteor shower blinds most of the population of Earth and spreads the spores of the deadly Triffids.

Our hero, Bill Masen played by Howard Keel had been in a hospital with his eyes bandaged, so he was unaffected. 

The Triffids quickly overrun everything, firing their spores and killing humans. They seem to be unkillable and constantly regenerate and grow new Triffids. 

The movie is a bit slow, and while I enjoy it, I am not ...ehm...blind to it's shortcomings.

The Triffids are all eventually defeated when Masen discovers they can be dissolved in salt water.

The movie takes a few liberties with the source novel. That's all I can recall, I read the novel back in the 1980s, and I am getting it; this movie and the 1981 BBC serial are all confused. Partly because I never got a chance to finish the 1981 version.

This movie is notable for being one of the first appearances on screen of Carol Ann Ford, who would later go on to play Susan Foreman in Doctor Who.

Featured Monster: Shambling Mound (and maybe Shrieker)

There are not a lot of plant monsters in the Monster Manual. Treants have a very obvious genesis, but the Shambling Mound was at least partially influenced by the Triffids, either book or movie. Though the art is more reminiscent of Dc's Swamp Thing and Marvel's Man Thing.  The noise the Triffids make is what I always suspected a Shrieker sounds like, only much louder and constant.

Shambling Mound and Shrieker


October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 17
First Time Views: 8

Monster Movie Marathon


October Horror Movie Challenge: Cry of the Banshee (1970)

Cry of the Banshee (1970)
You can't go wrong with an American International Pictures film or Vincent Price. I am touch surprised I had never seen this one, I was very sure I had but I have no memory of it.

The title sequences were created by Terry Gilliam of Monty Python fame. It was a little jarring at first, I was expecting a Monty Python sketch.

Set in England at the time of the Witch trials (16th Century) we have corrupt magistrate Lord Edward Whitman (Vincent Price) determined to seek out and punish witches. It just happens that he and his men only find pretty witches to torment. 

He encounters a true coven of witches and has many of their members killed, leaving the old witch Oona (Elisabeth Bergner). She pleads to Satan to send her an avenger to kill Whitman and his family.  Which is weird because I thought they were supposed to be worshiping "The Old Religion?"

The first to die is the son, Sean, and then the Lady Patricia.

Oona is discovered by the Priest and Harry Whitman, but not before Maureen is attacked.  Oona is killed but she admits that Roderrick (Patrick Mower) is really a Sidhe sent to kill the Whitmans.

Roderrick convinces Maureen he won't harm her until he sees Lord Edward, then he transforms to some sort of beast creature. Maureen grabs a blunderbus and kills Roderick. Lord Edward says with Roderick dead their family curse is lifted and they can leave their home. 

Lord Edward goes to visit Roderrick's grave only to discover he isn't in his coffin. He goes back to his carriage to find Harry and Maureen dead and Roderick now driving the carriage.

Featured Monster: Groaning Spirit (Banshee)

Banshees are a creature out of folklore, but there have been some modern, pre-1977, interpretations. This is one, and "Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959)" is another. Which was likely as much of a source for leprechauns how they are used in the Monster Manual in addition to folklore.  I can make this claim easy enough since they were the only two movies I could find prior to 1977 to feature a banshee.

Banshee

 The Banshee here is not the folkloric one, but it is a spirit of sorts. The Banshee in Darby O'Gill was actually much more terrifying.

 

But it is not much of a horror movie really. Darby O'Gill that is. Cry of the Banshee is quite the classic, even if it doesn't have a "real" Banshee in it.

The Banshee in the Monster Manual is the spirit of an elf woman. This comes from the idea that Ban Sidhe or Ban Sith means "Faerie Woman" in Gaelic. It works as far as AD&D goes. But this film makes a good case that the Banshee could also be the spirit of a dead witch. 

Maybe that is where I need to take this for D&D and related games.

October Horror Movie Challenge 2024
Viewed: 16
First Time Views: 8

Monster Movie Marathon