Shadow of the Sword

Shadow of the Sword

2005115 min
5.8/10
AdventureAction

Plot Summary

Central Europe, early 16th century: two childhood friends, Martin & Georg, find themselves on rival sides of a religious war with both of them struggling to do the right thing.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

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👥Cast (13)

Steven Berkoff

Steven Berkoff

Inquisitor

Nikolaj Coster-Waldau

Nikolaj Coster-Waldau

Martin

Julie Cox

Julie Cox

Margaretha

Lili Gesler

Lili Gesler

Librarian's daughter

Anastasia Griffith

Anastasia Griffith

Anna

Maria Hofstätter

Maria Hofstätter

Maria

Virág Bárány

Virág Bárány

Margaretha's Maid

Patrick Godfrey

Patrick Godfrey

Bertram

Lee Ingleby

Lee Ingleby

Bernhard

Eddie Marsan

Eddie Marsan

Fabio

Joe Mason

Joe Mason

Jakob

Peter McDonald

Peter McDonald

Georg

🎬Crew

Director

Simon Aeby

Writers

Steve Attridge, Susanne Freund

Producers

Helmut Grasser

🖼️Gallery (2 images)

Shadow of the Sword backdrop 1
Shadow of the Sword backdrop 2

🏷️Keywords

executioner

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

8/2/2025

Ok, so the writing and much of the acting do rather let this down, but it has assembled a surprisingly decent cast and the standard of the production is really fairly good for what must have been a fairly low-budget affair. It’s all about two lads who were separated at a young age. One - “Georg” (Peter McDonald) is headed for holy orders, the other “Martin” (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) is seconded into the military service of the emperor. Years pass and events now dictate that the former man be the prior in a small town where the latter is sent - as it’s executioner. John Shrapnel is probably the most lauded Thespian in this drama, but his role of the bishop is predictable and undercooked suggesting he only had one or two filming days to give this. Steven Berkoff is here too, but he is nowhere near his maniacal best as the menacingly titled “inquisitor” and at just short of two hours, it all takes far too long to get anywhere near the sharp end of it’s blade. Aesthetically, it does look good and it does give us a sense of the mud-strewn life lived by a population that lived in fear of a church that was very much of the “do as I say, not as I do” frame of mind and you like the genre then it’s a sort of “Cadfael” with gore, - and I didn’t hate it.

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Production Companies

Samsa Film
Film and Music Entertainment
T&C Film