Entertainment

An Epic Fantasy B-Movie You’ve Probably Never Heard Of Is Fulfilling Fans’ Fantasies on Streaming

Not exactly a bonafide classic.

Mythica A Quest for Heroes Image Source: Arrowstorm Entertainment

One of the more bankable and popular flavors of TV and cinema is the epic fantasy genre, especially after the phenomenal success of HBO’s Game of Thrones and Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogies. While we’ve had the recent one-two punch of House of the Dragon and Amazon’s Lord of the Rings prequel TV shows, some folks out there may be hankering for something to fill the void. Enter: Mythica: A Quest for Heroes.

Recommended Videos

Sure, it may come with a cavalcade of caveats – it appears to have been produced on a shoestring budget of roughly $58.50, has no real noteworthy actors, and has seemingly been overlooked by every movie review outlet in the world – but it’s still managed to lodge itself into Freevee’s Top 10 two days on the trot, per Flix Patrol.

For the unaware, 2015’s Mythica: A Quest for Heroes is the debut project from writer-director Anne K. Black, and kicks off a sword-and-sorcery series that now spans five films, with a sixth officially in pre-production. Interestingly, the first pic was partly fan-funded over on Kickstarter and ultimately went on to receive a sizeable injection of $94,294 in funding. (Yes, I was only joking about its budget earlier!)

Mythica: A Quest for Heroes
Image Source: Arrowstorm Entertainment

The story focuses upon a young magician (Melanie Stone) and a slave (Adam Johnson), who must build a party of adventurers to battle a powerful Necromancer called Szorlok, who is busy spreading an evil plague known as the Darkspore. Yes, it’s all pretty throwaway stuff, but thankfully, the actual movie is supposedly quite watchable.

You see, while Mythica: A Quest for Heroes has a whopping zero critic reviews over on Rotten Tomatoes, it does boast an audience score with… a respectable 69 percent. Looking briefly at the reviews from the regular Joes, and many claim that it’s quite an underrated feature. From the looks of things, it may not be a bonafide classic per se, but it may potentially fill the void left by other fantasy ilk like House of the Dragon and Amazon’s Lord of the Rings. I mean, it’s pretty slim pickings for fantasy fare right now so I guess beggars can’t be choosers, right?

But what say you, though? Have you had a chance to check out Mythica: A Quest for Heroes yet? Or will you be giving it a hard pass? Brandish your broadswords and let us know in the usual place down below.

About the author

Dylan Chaundy

Dylan is a Senior Writer at Twinfinite and has been with the site for over two years, and in the games media industry for over a decade. He typically covers horror, RPGs, shooters, indie titles and movies, and loves reading, pizza and skateboarding; ideally, at the same time. He has a degree in English Literature from Aberystwyth University, Wales. He thinks FTL may be the most perfect game ever created.

Comments