Talks of a sequel and a spin-off TV series continue to circulate, with studios exploring ways to produce future D&D content at a lower budget, focusing on the same spirit of adventure and character-driven storytelling that made the 2023 film a winner.
One of the most common failures of ensemble fantasy films is the “chosen one” syndrome—one hero who is blandly competent while everyone else is comic relief. Daley and Goldstein reject this. They build a party where everyone has flaws and agency.
But these are minor quibbles. In a just world, this film would have spawned a franchise.
In the film's climax, Edgin and his party retrieve the Horn. But the catch is brutal: the magic requires a specific, rare gem to work, and they only have one. This presents a dilemma. Dungeons Dragons- Honor Among Thieves
Regé-Jean Page steps in as a literal savior archetype. He represents the guest player who joins the campaign for one session, completely overpowered, entirely humorless, and utterly indispensable. Capturing the Chaos of the Tabletop
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves follows Edgin Darvis (Chris Pine), a charming bard and planner, and his muscle-bound barbarian best friend, Holga Kilgore (Michelle Rodriguez). Together with a ragtag crew—sorcerer Simon Aumar (Justice Smith), druid Doric (Sophia Lillis), and paladin Xenk Yendar (Regé-Jean Page)—they embark on an epic quest to retrieve a lost relic and save Edgin’s daughter [IMDb].
The "planner" whose plans often fail. Pine brings wit to the role of a Bard who uses inspiration rather than magic. Talks of a sequel and a spin-off TV
finally broke this curse by capturing the specific, chaotic energy of a tabletop session. The film succeeds not by merely literalizing the game’s mechanics, but by honoring the spirit of the "party"—a group of flawed, disparate individuals finding a sense of belonging through shared misadventure. Character and the "Found Family" Dynamic
For decades, Hollywood has chased the dragon. The impossible dream of translating the freewheeling, collaborative, and deeply nerdy magic of Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) into a blockbuster movie has been a graveyard of good intentions and terrible execution. The 2000 film starring Jeremy Irons remains a punchline—a cautionary tale of rubber prosthetics, baffling plots, and a tone that couldn’t decide if it was Xena: Warrior Princess or Gladiator .
Whether you're a seasoned Dungeon Master or have never rolled a twenty-sided die in your life, this is a cinematic experience well worth your time. It’s a hopeful reminder that sometimes, the best stories come from a bunch of misfits getting together, making a plan, and watching it go hilariously wrong. They build a party where everyone has flaws and agency
A great D&D campaign relies entirely on the chemistry of the adventuring party. Honor Among Thieves boasts a perfectly balanced roster, with each actor leaning into the mechanical strengths and comedic flaws of their respective classes. Edgin Darvis (The Bard)
Then, in the spring of 2023, something miraculous happened. Directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein rolled a natural 20. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves arrived in theaters not with a cynical shrug, but with a rogue’s grin and a heart of gold. It wasn’t just a good video game movie; it was a genuinely great fantasy heist film that understood the assignment on a molecular level.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is destined for cult-classic status. It sits on the shelf next to The Princess Bride , Stardust , and Galaxy Quest —films that respect their source material but never let it strangle the story.
(Sophia Lillis): A tiefling druid with the ability to wild shape into an Owlbear.