Leprechaun: Origins
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Leprechaun: Origins | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Zach Lipovsky |
Produced by | Chris Foss Michael Luisi |
Written by | Harris Wilkinson |
Based on | Characters by Mark Jones |
Starring | Dylan "Hornswoggle" Postl Stephanie Bennett Teach Grant Bruce Blain Adam Boys Andrew Dunbar Melissa Roxburgh Brendan Fletcher |
Music by | Jeff Tymoschuck |
Cinematography | Mahlon Todd Williams |
Edited by | Shawn Montgomery |
Production
company |
WWE Studios
(Original Leprechaun Films, Inc.) |
Distributed by | Lionsgate Films |
Release dates
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Running time
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90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Leprechaun: Origins is a 2014 American horror film directed by Zach Lipovsky, written by Harris Wilkinson and starring Dylan Postl (better known by his wrestling ring name Hornswoggle).[1][2] This movie has nothing to do with any previous made movie about leprechauns. WWE Studios President Michael Luisi has described the film as "a little darker, a little more traditional horror than the Warwick Davis ones that people remember".[3]
The movie was given to select theaters on August 22, 2014, and everywhere on August 29, 2014, followed by a VOD on 26 August and a DVD/Blu-ray release on September 30, 2014.[4][5]
Plot
A young couple, Catherine and Francois, are attempting to escape from a figure who eventually catches and drags Francois to his death. It also grabs hold of Catherine just before she arrives at a monolith in a grassland.
Four American college friends, Sophie, Ben, Jeni, and David are vacationing at an Irish countryside at Sophie's behest. The driver, Ian, lets them go at the monolith seen in the beginning. Sophie, who is a history bachelor, takes note of the monolith's symbol before heading to a local bar with the others, where they meet with a friendly old man, Hamish, who tells them about the history of the village: it was formerly a mining center for gold obtained in a nearby cavern, but when the gold ran out, the population dwindled. The four agree to be taken to a cottage where they can begin hitchhiking to the cavern, though they are wary of Hamish and his grumpy son, Sean.
That night, Jeni investigates a ruckus outside and glimpses a figure sprinting past the window. She wakes the others, who discover that Hamish and Sean had locked them up. A figure suddenly enters the cottage through the fireplace and forcibly takes Jeni's gold earring. After a brief struggle which sees David's leg being bitten by the monster, the four escape the cottage and race to the village hall, where they hide in the cellar. From a mythology book, Sophie learns that the monster is a Tuatha Dé Danann, also known as the leprechaun, who owns the gold that the villagers sought after. In return for the gold, the villagers have to sacrifice at least two humans each year as "compensation". The leprechaun lusts after gold, but it can be repelled by a certain symbol, the same one carved into the monolith, which serves as a barrier beyond which the being cannot get out.
The four are confronted by Hamish, who confirms that the villagers sacrifice tourists each year to avoid having to sacrifice themselves, and Sean, who has grown weary of the unjustified sacrifices and eventually lets them go. The four take the offer to escape by an old woman, Mary, who is revealed to be Hamish' accomplice. The four are then tied to trees as offerings for the leprechaun. The monster arrives and bites Jeni's tongue, but David manages to break free and releases the other three, though at the cost of his life. The remaining trio head back to the cottage to set a trap to kill the monster, but the leprechaun tricks Sophie and Ben to strike Jeni with their axes, killing her.
Sophie and Ben fetch Hamish's truck but is cornered by the leprechaun inside the village hall with the keys. The leprechaun eventually gets hold of Ben and kills him by ripping his spine out. Though cornered by Hamish, Sophie is given a free pass by Sean, who pushes Hamish into the cellar where the leprechaun kills him. Meanwhile, Sophie boards Hamish' truck but crashes midway while trying to avoid the leprechaun. She resumes her escape on foot and when the leprechaun finds her she distracts it with gold coins, then decapitates it using Francois' knife, which he had left in the prologue. Sophie finally manages to cross the monolith to safety just as a second leprechaun is revealed, before continuing her escape.
Cast
- Dylan "Hornswoggle" Postl as The Leprechaun
- Stephanie Bennett as Sophie Roberts
- Teach Grant as Sean McConville
- Bruce Blain as Ian Joyce
- Adam Boys as Francois
- Andrew Dunbar as Ben
- Melissa Roxburgh as Jeni
- Brendan Fletcher as David
- Emilie Ullerup as Catherine
Marketing
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. On March 17, 2014, WWE Studio's official YouTube channel premiered a clip from the film with an introduction by Dylan Postl, in light of Saint Patrick's Day.[6]
Reception
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Critical reception for Leprechaun: Origins has been predominantly negative.[7] Common complaints consist of cliché scripting and poor directing.[8][9] IGN heavily panned the film, writing "Slasher movies of this ilk come with a certain expectation of quality. But even the cheapest, most shoddy productions can manage some thrills, kills, and laughs with memorable characters and a cohesive plot when skilled filmmakers are at the helm. Leprechaun: Origins, unfortunately, offers none of these things."[10] We Got This Covered criticized the movie for being overly clichéd, stating "Honestly, the scariest bit of Lipovski’s vision is how blatantly stolen most scenes feel, be it the “long grass” scene from Jurassic Park: The Lost World or detailed costume rips from Red Clover, but what else do you expect from an unintelligible cash-in short on reveals, lacking on death scenes, and heavy on infuriating redundancy?"[11]
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Leprechaun: Origins at IMDb
- Leprechaun: Origins at Rotten Tomatoes
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