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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Probably the best made-for-Sci-Fi Channel movie ever
While the SciFi channel shovels out stinkers by the dozen, from Species 3 (and Species 2 clearly earned a grade of Z-, so why they'd make another one....) to that movie with the cloned dragon with Dean Cain, Megasnake with the winner of the superhero competition, Basilisk and let's not forget those amazingly awful and absurd Sabretooth slasher type movies (I liked how the...
Published on February 13, 2008 by Sandor Swartz

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14 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Pulpy Science Fiction
This apparently was shown on the Science Fiction Channel, before being released on DVD in 2007. The breaks for commercials are still obvious in this DVD production.
I have to admit I was biased against the production before watching it, based on the description. American soldiers in Iraq have to face down a Manticore? What bothered me about that was that--despite...
Published on December 13, 2007 by Karl E. Weaver


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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Probably the best made-for-Sci-Fi Channel movie ever, February 13, 2008
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This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
While the SciFi channel shovels out stinkers by the dozen, from Species 3 (and Species 2 clearly earned a grade of Z-, so why they'd make another one....) to that movie with the cloned dragon with Dean Cain, Megasnake with the winner of the superhero competition, Basilisk and let's not forget those amazingly awful and absurd Sabretooth slasher type movies (I liked how the fetus had sabreteeth - cats of course don't grow teeth until after they're born, just like humans) which somehow managed to cast John Rhys Davies and Venessa Angel (hmmm, lots of mythological creatures from the commodore 64 game Archon when you think about it - perhaps we can expect a banshee, golem or shapeshifter movie to come - hopefully not a unicorn movie) to every manner of hokey disaster flick, this one stands out as an exception, despite the fact that its plot SOUNDS like a clone of all the others, which themselves contain nothing new or creative and are therefore pointless. I assure you, this is much, much better, and much more poignant. It's not mindless violence, it's mindFUL violence!

I was so impressed that I was actually waiting all through 2005 and 2006, checking video stores every week, to try to buy it on DVD and finally gave up and recorded it and edited out the commercials for my own collection when I saw it was on one last time, and I guess I should have just waited a little bit longer since now on inspiration I looked it up and sure enough it was released on DVD in 2007. It has several familiar faces, most notably the man who played Chekotay from Star Trek Voyager (and longer back, a main character from the movie Night of the Comet). It amazingly performs a striking political commentary on the whole 'weapons of mass destruction' fiasco in Iraq, as a small group of religious eccentrics in Iraq resurrect a creature of legend to rekindle THEIR national spirit behind a real, living, breathing weapon of mass destruction, in the face of a military invasion of dubious justification. Of course, the Manticore is just SO powerful and nearly uncontrollable (a standard creation turning on its master sort of story you might say), and practically immortal, so it of course gets a bit out of hand (I thought the manticore was kind of cute though, especially that long spiky tail - and they got the legend just right on the physical characteristics of the Manticore, by the way). So how do you stop the invincible manticore? In the final confrontation, they do their best to scrap together legend and modern technology, so watch the movie and see what they come up with. You won't be disappointed with the resolution. Well, unless you were rooting for the manticore to destroy western civilization or become someone's pet, you won't be disappointed.

As another reviewer pointed out, if they couldn't make the manticore a little less flagrantly computer animated, they should have shown him a bit less. His first appearance was such a brief glimpse, you don't get a good look at him, and that was pretty good - too bad they didn't continue like that all the way through, that would have even better than 'a claw here, a talon there'. Oh well, so it's not perfect. But as a low budget movie goes, I'm sure it was a million dollars well spent. Hollywood can shovel out garbage at 5 times the rate of the Sci-Fi channel and 500 times the price, so this is a testament to how good even a small investment can be if it's only done right. And that manticore was totally badazzzz.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly entertaining, January 1, 2008
This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
Despite this film's obvious shortcomings, the entertainment value is priceless. The CGI of the Manticore itself is some of the worst in the history of the film industry. However, up until the Manticore is revealed onscreen, the film boasts some very fine performances from both known and unknown talent. Director Tripp Read does a wonderful job shooting action-intense sequences while still maintaining the integrity of quality cinematography.

While Manticores are generally revered as indigenous to Indian myth, this particular Manticore appears in the caves of what we can assume to be hills of Iraq. As I said before, every time this Manticore appears onscreen, the CGI is so bad that the only resort to surviving the images in front of you is to invent a drinking game.

However, when the Manticore is not onscreen, the actors seem to do a wonderful job despite the ridiculousness of the story and mediocre writing. As far as a Sci-Fi Channel original picture goes, they did surprisingly well in hiring the right actors. Relatively unknown Benjamin Burdick portrays a wonderfully funny and refreshing portrayal of a cameraman held captive by his overbearing anchorwoman, played by Chase Masterson. Robert Beltran is in-and-out at best, but Jeff Fahey displays true professionalism in his seriousness of the role. Heather Donahue also attacked her role with a surprising vivaciousness and though I have never seen someone quite as beautiful be a corporal in the military, I was pleasantly surprised by her performance. AJ Buckley and Faran Tahir do an excellent job as well.

Unknowns Michael Cory Davis, Richard Gnolfo, Jonas Talkington, and Jeff M. Lewis do a great job as a supporting ensemble. Though the entire cast were wearing uniforms the only two who actually played convincing soldiers were the two Jeffs: Fahey and Lewis.

The special effects are bad, the writing is mediocre, and the plot is well...a Sci-Fi Channel plot. Despite these, I noticed a smile on my face nearly the entire time and overall enjoyed the experience. I am excited to see what comes from these unknowns and Mr. Read in the future.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars manticore, April 22, 2011
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This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
this movie is awesome it has lots of gore,lots of
creature violence,and lots of action-packed adventure
also it takes place in Iraq.this movie is cool.
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14 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Pulpy Science Fiction, December 13, 2007
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This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
This apparently was shown on the Science Fiction Channel, before being released on DVD in 2007. The breaks for commercials are still obvious in this DVD production.
I have to admit I was biased against the production before watching it, based on the description. American soldiers in Iraq have to face down a Manticore? What bothered me about that was that--despite anyone's opinions about the fighting in Iraq, people are still dying over there. To turn the conflict into a backdrop for a science fiction movie seemed like it was almost trivializing or fictionalizing a very real conflict that is still going on.
Anyone who watched "No End in Sight", a documentary about the Iraq War which met with good reviews, may recall the looting of the Baghdad museum which scattered thousands of years worth of historical archives. This too is the backdrop for the story, as there is an ancient relic in there which can bring back to life the stone figures of 2 Manticora. The movie begins with a detachment of soliders trying to stop the looting and Iraqis looting the museum, including a pair intent on retrieving this artifact.
Well, you have your good Iraqis and your bad Iraqis, your good Americans and your..no, wait, there are no bad Americans in the film, only good guys.
Storyline is mediocre, acting is mediocre, nobody is going to win any awards from this production. Though when I started out I thought perhaps it would be the worst DVD of the decade to date, I decided it wasn't really quite that bad. Best character, of course, is the Manticore unfortunately. It's a little sad when a special-effects creature makes for the highlight of an entire movie- length production. If special effects are your thing you might find the beast interesting. If you enjoy laughing at a really pulpy plot, then you can do that too. This should be rated "R" for blood/gore, but no nudity or sex.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Cheap, but some how entertaining, January 12, 2011
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This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
As most people say, this is obviously a Sy-fy original movie so it will be very mediocre. However, the cheap special effects still give me a good laugh and make the movie entertaining. You know you have found an enjoyable movie when you can talk about it for a while afterwards, whether good or bad.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars WMD (Wow, Manticore's Decent!), August 24, 2010
This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
When you make a monster movie, you don't have a lot of options. There's the monster, the setting, and the heroes. Directors can change any one of these three factors, but deviating from standard monster horror tropes runs the risk of creating poorly developed characters, silly settings, or dumb monsters. So it's an amazing feat of filmmaking that Manticore manages to tweak all three elements and end up with an interesting movie.

The setting is the early days of the Iraq war, back when soldiers were looking for Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), "shock and awe" was a legitimate strategy, and there's a valid reason for having American actors carrying guns in a Middle Eastern setting. In other words, it's a perfect justification for having soldiers shoot at a monster.

Manticore's monster is essentially an animated statue. This frees up the manticore to be as bizarre as the director can imagine without binding it to any sort of logical biology. So the thing is resistant to bullets, explosions, and fire. It's also relatively true to the mythological beast after which the movie takes its name (which was in turn based on reports of a man-eating tiger). Curiously, the manticore doesn't have a man's face, but is rather a stone-like flying cat with a scorpion stinger. The manticore can both fling spines from its tail as well as sting opponents, which makes the beast a deadly floe.

The actors, including of Robert Beltran as Sergeant Baxter (of Voyager's Chakotay fame), do an admirable job of fleshing out each character. They have backstories, they have families, they are equally heroic and flawed. The soldiers use modern military slang and get on each other's nerves like real people. The casting works well - Heather Donahue from The Blair Witch project is a fame grubbing war journalist followed around by a scruffy cameraman. It doesn't get much more meta than that.

What could be a tasteless and tin-eared depiction of the Iraq War is instead shot like a war documentary. The action scenes feel real, even if the firearms are woefully mismatched. Even the monster tropes are turned on their ear - at one point sizzling droplets singe a soldier's shoulder. We know what to expect lurking over him, of course, because Aliens trained us to expect a slavering monster. But director Tripp Reed saw those movies too and he tweaks the audience's nose with a feint. Finally, a monster movie that doesn't slavishly follow standard Jaws/Aliens/Predator conventions!

Manticore is hardly perfect. Besides the aforementioned firearm inaccuracies, the CGI is occasionally lax, the dialogue isn't always crisp, and the gore is a bit over the top. But that doesn't detract from the competent staging, camerawork, musical score, actors acting believably, characters written with motivation, and monsters that have a weakness - even if it's an invented one that has nothing to do with the original myth. It's good enough that you might find your own WMD.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars an ancient menace in the desert . . ., May 12, 2010
This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
Manticore (2005) is a SyFy original movie, set in Iraq, involving a winged creature, with glowing red eyes, called the Manticore, brought to life in a ceremonial ritual. Journalist Ashley Pierce (Chase Masterson) and her cameraman, are among those trapped in a small remote village, where the Manticore has appeared. An army unit commanded by Sergeant Tony Baxter (Robert Beltran), sent out to recover the missing reporter, engages and tries to defeat this supernatural enemy.

Base on an obscure legend, the story is barely fleshed out, although the acting is passable, and there are some humorous moments. The special effects and CGI for the Manticore, is subpar, even for SyFy, with the beast showing up to best effect in the dark. Bullets don't have much of an effect, but the creature has a strange vulnerability, that one of the soldiers (Heather Donahue) is able to exploit, just barely in time.

If you are really intrigued, you can save yourself a few bucks, and catch this the next time it is featured on SyFy.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars C Grade 'Predator' wannabe........, May 4, 2008
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Shyam (Chennai, India) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Manticore (DVD)
The story is about an American Sergeant and his soldiers serving in Iraq who encounter a manticore (Mythical flying beast on crack) that has annihilated an entire village. They go to the village to rescue a TV news reporter and her cameraman who were last seen in the same area. How they come out of it forms the crux of this story

Now, the reason i give this film 4 stars, although it sounds corny and the special effects and acting are at best lame. You have to spare a thought of the 'production budget', these people had to work with. So with that amount of money, the actors and special effects etc.. were pretty much what you got for.

Granted Its not going to make to to any Top 10 list or for that matter, Top 10,000 list. But, its a good sci-fi B movie.
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Manticore
Manticore by Tripp Reed (DVD - 2007)
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