Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 150000000

Revenue

$ 215300000

Top Billed Cast

Nicolas Cage

Balthazar Blake

Jay Baruchel

David "Dave" Stutler

Alfred Molina

Maxim Horvath

Teresa Palmer

Rebecca "Becky" Barnes

Toby Kebbell

Drake Stone

Omar Benson Miller

Bennet Zurrow

Monica Bellucci

Veronica Gorloisen

Alice Krige

Morgana le Fay

Robert Capron

Oliver

James A. Stephens

Merlin

Gregory Woo

Sun-Lok

Nicole Ehinger

Abigail Williams

Ethan Peck

Andre

Adriane Lenox

Ms. Jessalyn Algar

Jake Cherry

Dave Stutler (Young)

Peyton List

Becky Barnes (Young)

Ian McShane

Narrator (voice)

Parisa Fitz-Henley

Bennet's Girlfriend

Jian Leonardo

Sun Roc

Rohit Gaur

Villager

Maha Chehlaoui

Hot Girl

Oscar A. Colon

Fry Cook

Lorna Guity Pruce

Metermaid

Gerrold Vincent

Hipster at Cafe

John Farrer

Hotel Doorman

Jason R. Moore

Subway Mugger

Tarek Arafat

Fireworks Salesmen

Rich Campbell

Medieval Troubador

Manish Dayal

NYU Clerk

Victor Cruz

Auto Impound Clerk

Joe Lisi

Police Captain

William Devlin

Police Officer

Melissa Gallagher

Woman on the Street

Henry Yuk

Chinese Dragon Carrier

Wai Ching Ho

Chinese Woman

Marika Daciuk

Russian Woman

Sándor Técsy

Russian Man

Ross Massood

Indian Man

Amit Soni

Indian Boy

Izuchukwu Mozie

African Boy

Jordan Johnston

Mean Kid

Ryan O'Callaghan

Rain Kid

Jessie Nagpal

Indian Religious Ceremony Member

Nundini Rani

Indian Ritual Woman

Ambika Vas

Praying Woman

Vixit Thamboun

China Doll Mime

Kerry Britt

Chinatown Beauty Queen

Billy Anastasiou

NYC Pedestrian

Tanzeel Kayani

34 street pedestrian

Ian Alda

Physics Student

Candice Wilson Cherry

College Student

Brandon Gill

Student in Bathroom

Adria Baratta

Student

Rosie Moss

Student

Nick Sartori

Student

Pamela Rickard

Student

Jed Nolan

Student

Regina Palian

Lawyer

Johnathan Hallgrey

Lawyer

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Movie Reviews

A review by Dark Jedi

Written by Dark Jedi on 2018-01-11

As usual the so-called critics wrote it down quite a lot but the reviews by ordinary people gave it a much better score (although not stellar). Not very surprising of course since those self-proclaimed besserwissers always moan about films made just to entertain. I found the film well worth the time and money spent. Of course the plot was not very intriguing but is there anyone who would really expect that from a film like this? It’s clearly aimed at younger people and people with a liking for magic and old-fashioned adventure. The effects where really nice and I certainly liked the old-fashioned magic theme. The fact that the lead actor was Nicolas Cage of course helps a lot as well.

A review by r96sk

Written by r96sk on 2020-11-09

Good enough, if nothing standout. <em>'The Sorcerer’s Apprentice'</em> is an interesting film. The premise isn't anything revolutionary, it follows the same beats that a load of these sorta films do; I recall <em>'Bulletproof Monk'</em> and <em>'Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief'</em> having similar-ish set-ups. That's not to say it isn't enjoyable, as I did like it. Nicolas Cage always manages to entertain one way or another, while Jay Baruchel works well for the comedic stuff in particular. Alfred Molina makes another live-action Disney appearance, following on from <em>'Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time'</em> two months prior. He's solid, but better in the latter. The special effects are excellent, I really enjoyed seeing it all come to life onscreen. The score is decent, though the pacing could've been finer. Overall, it's a film I just about feel satisfied with. Worth a watch? Sure.

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-04-04

Aside from an entertaining scene with some of Lukas' wonderful "L'Apprenti Sorcier" and some overly enthusiastic mops, this is a really poor adaptation of this Arthurian legend. In days of old, "Merlin" manages to imprison "Morgana" (Alice Krige) inside a sort of Russian doll. It falls to "Balthazar" (Nicolas Cage) to keep it safe over the millennia until the successor to the sagely old wizard emerges. Well it does, in the unlikely guise of the rather geeky "Dave" (Jay Baruchel) and so it falls to the former to train the hapless latter in the arts of sorcery. Meanwhile, the nasty "Horvath" (Alfred Molina) is bent on releasing the witch from her captivity, and aided by a Billy Idol style rocker "Drake Stone" (Toby Kebbell) is hot on their trail. To be fair, the intention is good - there is plenty of quickly-paced action, the visual effects are adequate and it really looks ok. The acting, though, is pretty terrible. There isn't the slightest hint of a spark between Cage and his young protege; Molina as the suave and ruthless "Horvath" falls fairly flat and the rest of the cast really just serve to clutter this up. Apart, that is, from Kebbell who is having a little fun. The dialogue is unremarkable, and at ten minutes shy of two hours, this is also just way too long. Pity. It has the resources to be good - just let down by the imagination of Messrs Cage and Turteltaub.