Spellbreaker: Secret of the Leprechauns
Film Poster
Directed byTed Nicolaou
Written byCharles Band (Original Idea)
Michael McGann (Story)
Ted Nicolaou & Patrick J. Clifton (Screenplay)
Produced byOana Paunescu
Vlad Paunescu
Starring
CinematographyAdolfo Bartoli
Edited byGregory Sanders
Music byRichard Kosinski
William Levine
John Zeretzke
Production
companies
Distributed byMoonbeam Entertainment
Paramount Home Video
Release date
  • October 15, 1996 (1996-10-15)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Spellbreaker: Secret of the Leprechauns is a 1996 American direct-to-video film, starring Gregory Smith, Madeleine Potter, Godfrey James, John Bluthal and Tina Martin. It was co-written and directed by Ted Nicolaou. The film is a sequel to Leapin’ Leprechauns! and both movies were filmed back-to-back in Romania.

Plot

In this sequel, Mikey travels on vacation to Ireland intending to spend sometime with his grandpa, Michael. Now, they will live another great adventure in the leprechauns's world.

Cast

Reception

Monster Hunter gave the film a bad review, however noting that it is better than its predecessor: "Keeping the action set in Ireland, dispensing with the lame family drama and ramping up the action up to and including a trip to the underworld where poor Mikey is forced into a leather harness so he can haul the steamer trunk full of leprechauns and his now shrunken grandfather(!) easily make Spellbreaker a two-leaf clover film to Leapin’ Leprechauns!‘s one-leaf clover blarney. And if it’s all resolved with a bit of leprechaun wish deus ex machina that seemed made up on the spot, well, that’s just something to be chalked up to the mysterious ways of those tricky Fairy Folk, right?".[1] TV Guide gave Spellbreaker two out of five stars, stating: "even kids may be disappointed by the cheap special effects, with a crude illusion of miniaturization attempted merely by posing "leprechauns" as far away from the camera as possible, with magnified objects in the foreground. On the other hand, ornate costumes and interiors (even a properly spooky, fiery Underworld) are quite impressive, and most likely creditable to the opera and theater craftspeople of Bucharest.[2]

References

  1. "Spellbreaker: Secret of the Leprechauns (1996)". Monster Hunter. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  2. "Spellbreaker: Secret Of The Leprechauns". TV Guide. Retrieved 10 April 2017.


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