the Dungeons & Dragons movies. Although it performed disappointingly at the box office, it was widely adored by fans and critics. It was a huge step up from the first three D&D movies, which came out between 2000 and 2012. And yet, the live-action show should take a different approach.

While cutting humor akin to that of Honor Among Thieves could never be unwelcome in future D&D adaptations, the live-action TV show should marry this with a darker tone, or prioritize the darkness. Then, it could deliver the kind of dark fantasy that streamers are thirsty for. Shows like Wednesday prove this thirst. But more importantly, it is high time D&D adapted classic characters, rather than piling new ones into the mix. The Legend of Drizzt books offer the best characters for the job, particularly because of their outstanding character development.

Jarlaxle & Artemis Are The Perfect Dungeons & Dragons Characters For A TV Show

Drizzt Is A Good Lead, But The Show Also Needs Characters That Develop

Drow ranger Drizzt Do'Urden should be the main character of Dungeons & Dragons' live-action TV show, and the ing characters around him will be just as crucial to the show's success. Drizzt was introduced by American author R.A. Salvatore in 1988 in The Crystal Shard, the first book in The Icewind Dale Trilogy, although he wasn't intended to be the protagonist. Salvatore's first published novel was a hit - especially Drizzt. This led Salvatore to make his next series, The Dark Elf Trilogy, a Drizzt prequel. These historical characters could draw in the crowd that Honor Among Thieves didn't.

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Drizzt Do'Urden, the Dark Elf of Dungeons & Dragons fame, is overdue for a TV show or movie, with certain actors seeming suitable for the role.

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In The Dark Elf Trilogy, Drizzt and his scimitars fought back against the violent culture of the Underdark, which was tantalizingly teased in Honor Among Thieves. While Artemis was introduced as a villain in the Icewind Dale books, Jarlaxle was introduced as a complex villain of the Underdark in the prequel subseries. In many ways, Drizzt remains fairly static throughout The Legend of Drizzt. His immovable principles are what make him strong TV show lead material. But a truly great contemporary series also needs characters that develop significantly, and Jarlaxle and Artemis do just that.

What Makes Jarlaxle & Artemis The Right Characters For A Live-Action D&D Show

Jarlaxle & Artemis Are The Most Versatile D&D Characters

DnD characters and enemies arranged like a movie poster, with a beholder looming in the background and a hooded figure wearing a golden gauntlet in front.

Like Severus Snape in Harry Potter and Jaime Lannister in Game of Thrones, Jarlaxle and Artemis offer 180-degree character development from villains to heroes of the highest caliber. Heroes like Harry Potter and Drizzt Do'Urden are successful because they grow ever more into their confidence and their true selves, which is evident from the start. But the best of contemporary fantasy, TV, and Hollywood in general, has been engaging viewers with the emotion of shocking character development. The D&D live-action show would draw in old fans with the history of these characters and new ones with the sheer drama.

Drizzt was meant to lead the party through the Underdark in Honor Among Thieves, but Hasbro's 2020 blog post apologizing after accusations of racist drow skin color led the movie to replace Drizzt with Xenk. The movie didn't want to fan the flames of Dungeons & Dragons' mini drow controversy but would have benefited from Drizzt's pull and other Underdark lore. The live-action TV show needs to utilize this fan-favorite Forgotten Realms storyline, which was also exploited in the critically acclaimed Waterdeep: Dragon Heist campaign. Jarlaxle was a highlight NPC of this campaign.

180-Degree Character Development Has Become The Secret Ingredient Of Good Fantasy

Character Heel-Face Turns Are The Secret Ingredient To The Winning Formula

Drizzt Do'Urden, Zaknafein & Lolth in Dungeons & Dragons Legend of Drizzt The Dark Elf Trilogy book two Exile.

K-dramas went viral with their exemplary heel-face turns, and Jarlaxle and Artemis are Dungeons & Dragons' best bet at replicating this success. A character exhibiting a heel-face turn may start out a villain and end up becoming completely humbled or being revealed as someone who was self-sacrificing and kind all along. R.A. Salvatore wisely ended up devoting a whole series to the meandering misadventures of Jarlaxle and Artemis in Sellswords. It was the most vital The Legend of Drizzt had felt in a while, confirming consumers' long-proven need to enact a redemption narrative in their own minds.

Jarlaxle starts the story as a shady mercenary leader of Menzoberranzan and ends up saving thousands of lives by Lolth's Warrior.

Villain-to-hero arcs are the gold standard of modern storytelling on screen, tapping into viewer guilt that finds a kind of projected resolution in character redemption while enabling a salvation fantasy, the ultimate comfort for many. Amazon Prime Video invented an Orc for The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power (Adar) and redeemed him by the end of season 2, offering the best TV it had written yet. Jarlaxle starts the story as a shady mercenary leader of Menzoberranzan and ends up saving thousands of lives by Lolth's Warrior, making him the perfect complement to Drizzt's stability in a hypothetical live-action show.

What The Ideal Dungeons & Dragons Live-Action Show Would Look Like

A Dungeons & Dragons TV Show Must Focus On Its Characters

Drizzt Do'Urden and Guenhwyvar of The Legend of Drizzt Dungeons & Dragons The Dark Elf Trilogy Homeland

The live-action TV show currently being shopped by Hasbro has to be character-driven if it wants to succeed. And, it must maintain a tight focus on a few characters, rather than dropping viewers in with a vast and sprawling network of nobodies. A world-driven or plot-driven fantasy narrative like that D&D could offer has been done a hundred times, but where Honor Among Thieves deserves a sequel is its perfect capture of the camaraderie of an adventuring party. Amazon's The Legend of Vox Machina, based on D&D actual play web series Critical Role, succeeds in exactly the same way.

The D&D show should keep Salvatore's exciting plot but prioritize character growth and relationships to be relevant to old fans and new.

Amazon's The Wheel of Time is exactly how the D&D show shouldn't go. Neither the characters nor their relationships were developed enough to be cared about before characters started going their separate ways and doing a million complex things that obscured their personality, rather than clarifying it. It got harder to care about characters with each one added. The D&D show should keep Salvatore's exciting plot but prioritize character growth and relationships to be relevant to old fans and new. AMC+'s Interview with the Vampire exhibits the exemplary character focus and development that Jarlaxle and Artemis could offer Dungeons & Dragons.

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023) Movie Poster
Created by
E. Gary Gygax, Dave Arneson, Jonathan Goldstein, John Francis Daley
First Film
Dungeons & Dragons
First TV Show
Dungeons & Dragons
Latest TV Show
Dungeons & Dragons
Cast
Bradley Cooper, Jason Wong

The Dungeons & Dragons franchise is a fantasy adventure series based on the iconic tabletop role-playing game. The franchise includes both live-action and animated adaptations, with the most notable being the recent film Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023), which brought the fantasy world of D&D to a broader audience with its blend of humor, action, and classic D&D elements. The franchise explores themes of heroism, friendship, and the unpredictable nature of adventuring in a magical world filled with dragons, wizards, and mythical creatures.

TV Show(s)
Dungeons & Dragons

World-driven or plot-driven stories are often the problem with fantasy series, when the problem is often cited, mistakenly, as the tone