There’s bad, and then there’s Full Moon Romania bad. You know the type: dim lighting, castles that smell of mildew, costumes stitched together from rejected Ren Faire capes, and actors who look like they’ve been paid in beer and day-old sausages. Into this swamp of cinematic desperation wades Trancers 4: Jack of Swords, a movie that proves even Tim Thomerson’s gravelly charm has a breaking point.
This is the fourth entry in the Trancers series—a franchise that started in 1985 with a surprisingly tight sci-fi noir about a cop chasing psychic zombies through 1980s Los Angeles. By the time Jack of Swords rolls around, the producers had clearly lost the thread. What was once cyberpunk gumshoe pulp had mutated into a Dungeons & Dragons campaign run by a Dungeon Master who’s drunk, bored, and possibly hates you.
Jack Deth in Ye Olde Crapworld
Jack Deth (Tim Thomerson, still trying to hold onto his dignity like it’s the last cigarette in the pack) is back in the 23rd century after his adventures in 1980s Los Angeles. He’s lost one wife, then another, and honestly, you can’t blame them. Being married to Jack Deth is like living with a perpetually hungover uncle who won’t stop quoting Dirty Harry.
Anyway, he agrees to another assignment, hops into a time portal, and—surprise!—winds up in a bargain-bin fantasy dimension where everyone speaks like they’re auditioning for the local Renaissance fair. Technology doesn’t work here (translation: the budget couldn’t afford cool gadgets), so Jack spends most of the movie squinting at people in chainmail while muttering one-liners that land with the grace of a drunk knight falling off his horse.
Here, Trancers are replaced with “Nobles,” which are basically vampires who suck the life force out of peasants. Imagine aristocrats crossed with leeches, only somehow less charismatic. The rebels are called Tunnel Rats, and yes, they live in tunnels. It’s that kind of screenwriting.
Lord Caliban: Discount Villain Extraordinaire
The villain is Lord Caliban (Clabe Hartley), a man who looks like he lost a bet and had to cosplay as “Medieval Fabio Who Smells Like Garlic.” He wants a mystical artifact called the Diamond in the Castle of Unrelenting Terror, which sounds metal as hell but ends up looking like a shiny paperweight you’d find in a Pier 1 clearance bin.
Caliban is bad because the script says so. He snarls, he postures, and he spends a suspicious amount of time stroking women who look like they wandered in from a Romanian nightclub. He’s evil, sure, but also boring—the cinematic equivalent of soggy white bread.
Jack’s Motley Crew of Who Cares
Of course, Jack can’t fight evil alone. He teams up with Lyra (Stacie Randall), a rebel with great hair and dialogue so wooden you could chop it for firewood. There’s also Prospero (Ty Miller), Caliban’s son who rebels against daddy because every fantasy cliché requires a conflicted heir. Toss in some Tunnel Rats, a sorceress or two, and a guy named Farr (Alan Oppenheimer, slumming hard), and you’ve got a party of characters nobody will remember five minutes after the credits roll.
These sidekicks are the human equivalent of packing peanuts—filling space, cushioning the runtime, and ultimately disposable.
The Cliffhanger Nobody Asked For
The plot—if you can call it that—centers around Jack trying to stop Caliban from getting the magic diamond while also figuring out how to get back home. Naturally, the movie ends on a cliffhanger, leading into Trancers 5: Sudden Deth,filmed back-to-back with this one. Because nothing says “confidence in your product” like chaining two direct-to-video sequels together and hoping somebody, somewhere, gives a damn.
Spoiler: nobody did.
Production Values: Romania Says Hello
Shot in Romania (because castles are cheap, and labor laws are looser than a Trancer’s skull), Trancers 4 looks like it was lit with candles stolen from the set of Subspecies—which, to be fair, it probably was. Every corridor looks damp. Every costume looks itchy. And every sword fight looks like the actors were told not to make actual contact for fear of breaking the props.
The sets might have been impressive if you weren’t distracted by the pervasive sense of mildew. The castle itself deserves better—it’s probably hosted centuries of history, and here it is, debased into a backdrop for a movie where Tim Thomerson tries not to trip over a foam rock.
Thomerson: The Last Honest Man
Let’s give credit where it’s due: Tim Thomerson is a pro. Even in this medieval mess, he shows up, squints hard, and delivers one-liners like, “Dry hair’s for squids!” (no, that’s from the first film, but you get the idea). He’s tired, he’s cranky, and he’s surrounded by actors who couldn’t sell a hotdog at a baseball game—but damn it, he still tries.
Watching him here feels like watching a retired boxer take one last fight because he needs the paycheck. You respect the effort, but you also want to grab him by the shoulders and say, “Tim, buddy, you’re better than this.”
The Good, The Bad, and The Full Moon
The Good:
-
Thomerson, still swinging despite the script.
-
Romanian castles look spooky if you squint and ignore the mildew.
-
Stephen Macht shows up briefly as Harris, reminding you that actual actors once cared about this series.
The Bad:
-
Everything else. The script reads like fan fiction scrawled on the back of a Denny’s placemat.
-
The pacing is glacial—scenes of people walking through damp hallways go on longer than most marriages.
-
Cliffhanger ending assumes anyone will want to watch Trancers 5.
The Full Moon:
-
Nobles. They’re supposed to be terrifying. They look like accountants with anemia.
-
“Castle of Unrelenting Terror,” which turns out to be about as scary as a Motel 6 lobby.
-
Props and costumes clearly recycled from three other Full Moon productions shot that same summer.
Final Thoughts
Trancers 4: Jack of Swords is where franchises go to die—not with a bang, but with a whimper echoing through a Romanian dungeon. What started as a clever, noir-tinged sci-fi adventure devolves into cosplay theater with all the menace of a middle-school talent show.
Tim Thomerson deserved better. Hell, we all did. But instead, we got a soggy, sword-and-sorcery detour that nobody asked for, nobody needed, and nobody remembers unless they’re writing a review like this.
If you’re a Trancers completist, watch it once, grimace, and then immediately wash your brain out with the original film. If you’re new to the series, skip this one unless you enjoy the peculiar sensation of watching a franchise self-destruct in real time.

