Mazes and Monsters (1982)

  • Year: 1982
  • Released: 28 Dec 1982
  • Country: United States
  • Adwords: N/A
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084314/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/mazes_and_monsters
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English
  • MPA Rating: PG
  • Genre: Adventure, Drama, Fantasy
  • Runtime: 100 min
  • Writer: Tom Lazarus, Rona Jaffe
  • Director: Steven Hilliard Stern
  • Cast: Tom Hanks, Wendy Crewson, David Wysocki
  • Keywords: role playing, dungeons and dragons, larp, role playing game, moral panic,
4.1/10
19% – Audience

Mazes and Monsters Storyline

Despite their personality differences, Kate, Jay Jay, Daniel and Robbie are close college friends, bound together by their pleasure in playing a game called “Mazes and Monsters.” In order to keep it interesting, they decide to take the game from the board into a real-life setting. But soon the line between reality and fantasy becomes difficult to differentiate, and what started out as just a game soon becomes a nightmare.

Mazes and Monsters Photos

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Mazes and Monsters Movie Reviews

Crummy, Transparent Failed Drama with a Blunt, Misguided Message

A full-on smear campaign about the evils of Dungeons and Dragons, from the height of the parental outcry against the game. Funny and sad in the same context as Reefer Madness, it’s akin to a long after-school special in the blunt, inelegant way it hammers away at its only point. An extremely young Tom Hanks, freshly released from his run on Bosom Buddies, cut his teeth on more serious material in this leading role. As the poor sap who nosedives into deep mental illness as a direct result of the game, his part is madly corny and he clearly had some growing pains to work through before becoming the dramatic juggernaut we’d all come to know a decade later. Badly produced, terribly acted, smug and boring and predictable to the final reveal, it’s a living stereotype, the very essence of a bad made-for-TV movie.

early Tom Hanks

Mazes and Monsters is a role playing board game. JayJay (Chris Makepeace) is diminished by his overbearing mother. Kate (Wendy Crewson) is his friend. Daniel (David Wallace) suffers under his domineering parents. Robbie Wheeling (Tom Hanks) is starting anew at college after some problems in his past. The three friends convince the level 9 Robbie to play the game again despite his obsessive problem with it. JayJay decides to bring the game into the real world of the caverns.

The made-for-TV production is pretty weak. The most compelling part is Tom Hanks early in his career during his ‘Bosom Buddies’ days. It has the lesson-of-the-week element to it. I also remember thinking as a kid that it’s a fascinating concept to play the game for real. Nowadays, it’s called LARP. The mental disturbance is done badly but Hanks shouldn’t be blamed for it. It’s cheesy and probably better to let Hanks do some acting.

Blurs the line between fantasy and stupidity

I didn’t even know this was originally a made-for-tv movie when I saw it, but I guessed it through the running time. It has the same washed-out colors, bland characters, and horrible synthesized music that I remember from the 80’s, plus a ‘social platform’ that practically screams “Afterschool special”. Anyhoo.

Rona Jaffe’s (thank you) Mazes and Monsters was made in the heyday of Dungeons & Dragons, a pen-and-paper RPG that took the hearts of millions of geeks around America. I count myself one of said geeks, tho I have never played D&D specifically I have dabbled in one of its brethren. M&M was also made in the heyday of D&D’s major controversy-that it was so engrossing that people could lose touch with reality, be worshiping Satan without knowing, blah blah. I suppose it was a legitimate concern at one point, if extremely rare-but it dates this movie horrendously.

We meet 4 young college students, who play the aptly named Mazes and Monsters, to socialize and have a little time away from mundane life. Except that M&M as presented is more boring than their mundane lives. None of the allure of gaming is presented here-and Jay Jay’s request to take M&M into ‘the real world’ comes out of nowhere. It’s just an excuse to make one of the characters go crazy out of nowhere also-though at that point we don’t really care. Jay Jay, Robbie, Kate and Daniel are supposed to be different-but they’re all rich WASPy prigs who have problems no one really has.

But things just continue, getting worse in more ways than one. The low budget comes dreadfully clear, (I love the ‘Entrance’ sign and cardboard cutout to the forbidden caverns) Robbie/Pardu shows why he’s not a warrior in the oafiest stabbing scene ever, and the payoff atop the ‘Two Towers’ is unintentionally hilarious. Tom Hanks’ blubbering “Jay Jay, what am I doing here?” made me laugh for minutes on end. Definitely the low point in his career.

Don’t look at it as a cogent satire, just a laughable piece of 80’s TV trash, and you’ll still have a good time. That is, if you can stay awake. The majority is mostly boring, but it’s all worthwhile for Pardu’s breakdown at the end. At least Tom Hanks has gotten better. Not that he could go much worse from here.