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A woman who is dressed as Blood Elf from World of Warcraft attends the BlizzCon, the fan-centric celebration of video game publisher Blizzard, Friday, Nov. 7, 2014, in Anaheim, Calif. The annual convention kicked off Friday with more than 25,000 attendees. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) Image Credit: AP

Orcs won’t just be sword fodder in the upcoming film adaptation of the Blizzard video game franchise Warcraft. The snarling green-skinned creatures will be respected just as much as the human characters from the fantasy saga.

“As in the game, where you can choose what side to be on, I thought it was really important that we made a film which allowed you to be on either side of the conflict and follow heroes on both sides,” director Duncan Jones told a massive crowd on Friday at BlizzCon, a fan-centric celebration of Blizzard Entertainment Inc.

Jones was on hand at the Anaheim Convention Centre with Warcraft visual effects supervisor Bill Westenhofer to hype the upcoming film from Legendary and Universal Pictures. They were later joined on stage by True Blood and Pacific Rim actor Rob Kazinsky, who was wielding a replica of the behemoth Doomhammer weapon. Kazinsky is playing the orc warrior Orgrim in the film.

“We’re fans,” said Kazinsky. “We wanted it to be right. It would absolutely murder me if this thing sucked.”

The director, a longtime World of Warcraft player who previously created the films Source Code and Moon, was quick to note the Warcraft movie will keep the focus on the conflict between orcs and humans, which was depicted in the original Warcraft games from the 1990s.

“It’s got so many stories,” said Jones. “World of Warcraft has been going for 10 years, Warcraft itself has been going for 20 years. Our challenge was to drill down and find a story that would work as a single film.”

During the panel, Jones announced the cast members and what roles they’ll be playing in the film, scheduled for release in March 2016

On the human-led Alliance side, Vikings star Travis Fimmel will portray protagonist Anduin Lothar; Dominic Cooper has been cast as King Llane Wrynn; Ben Foster will play the mysterious mentor Medivh; and Ben Schnetzer will portray young mage Khadgar.

For the orc-filled Horde, Toby Kebbel will play Frostwolf Clan leader Durotan; Clancy Brown will portray the war chief Blackhand; and Daniel Wu will embody orc ruler Gul’Dan. The performances of the actors portraying orcs will be computer generated.

Mission: Impossible actress Paula Patton will portray Garona, an orc who is caught between the Alliance and the Horde. Unlike the other actors portraying members of the snarling orc race, Jones said her performance won’t be completely computer generated.

After the presentation, attendees lined up for a seat in a makeshift 600-seat theatre equipped with Dolby Atmos technology to watch a trailer for the film, as well as footage that illustrated how special-effects studio Industrial Light and Magic is creating computer-generated orcs with expressive faces.

“We have so many special effects,” said Jones. “It’s Avatar and Lord of the Rings at the same time.”