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WARRIORS OF THE WASTELAND Review: Director Nemanja Ceramic Wears His Influences On His Sleeves And Travels An Often Familiar Path In The Post Apocalyptic Folk Tale

Warriors of the Wasteland is now available for rental or purchase on VOD.

Originally released in Serbia as Son’s Will in 2024, Warriors of the Wasteland is an epic adventure set in a dystopian future after a nuclear war, centered on a fabled sword a lone stranger and his journey to fulfill his destiny told through a series of flashbacks as if it were a campfire legend handed down over generations.

Fans of the Mad Max franchise or the various post apocalyptic tales it spawned like Fist of the North Star will recognize numerous borrowed elements both visually and thematically. In addition, there are noticeable spaghetti western and samurai film influences throughout with the lifted touches all handled with loving care and affectionally executed. That passion for genre cinema is also evident in the ambitious and impressive scope and scale of the production design and story with detailed lore as well as a large cast of characters. The epic and cinematic look and story is enhanced by how effectively the filmmakers use their often stunning locations. The decaying buildings and landscapes are presented in a way that is both haunting and beautiful.

However, despite its nice execution of familiar genre elements and handsome visuals, the quest is hampered by pacing issues and uneven dubbing.* There is some solid samurai film inspired action with sword fights that build to bursts of explosive violence in favor of the type of dynamic movements and fight choreography you would find in martial arts movies— including a show stopping duel in the final act where the hero battles a stairwell full of ninjas— I really enjoyed, the film would have benefited from more action like it instead of focusing on the Game Of Thrones style Machiavellian scheming the movie often gets bogged down and preoccupied with robbing the story of its momentum.

It is always exciting to see independent and world cinema tackle this type of large scale fantasy/sci-fi film so I applaud Warriors of the Wasteland for the effort and ambition. Yet those lofty goals also contribute to film’s undoing. Its sprawling tale is too reliant on awkwardly dubbed dialog and at times buckles under the weight of its own ambition. There is plenty of passion and craft on display even if doesn’t all come together cohesively. 

*the film was shot in English but then dubbed by the performers who most likely don’t speak the language so the dialog has an odd rhythm to it.

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