I just watched Dragonslayer (1981) on Hulu, because why not. It was one of my favorite movies when I was a kid, and I hadn't watched it in, well… decades at this point.
It holds up really well — a classic of '80s fantasy. A few things stood out to me…
- There was significantly more gore than I remembered as a kid, as well as some partial nudity. I'm guessing that I only ever saw the "edited for television" version when I was a kid.
- This was Peter MacNicol's first on-screen role. Yeah, the guy who is best known for playing a short, neurotic super-lawyer in David E. Kelley dramas (Chicago Hope, Ally McBeal). How did that happen?
- The various special effects used to create the dragon were bleeding edge at that time, and they still look good today. Small-scale puppets, large-scale puppets, full-scale animatronics, and stop-motion animation — all good. If anything looks cheap, it's the green-screen technology used to composite the effects.
- None of the characters were truly evil, not in the melodramatic way that we see so often these days. The king sincerely believed his bargain with the dragon saved the kingdom, the guard captain sincerely believed he needed to kill interlopers and wannabes because they would provoke the dragon, and the dragon honored its side of the king's bargain and just wanted to feed its offspring anyhow. Even the hero, the wizard's apprentice, was unreservedly brave and did the best he could with the skills and resources he had. At worst he was a little cocky, but no more so than other cinematic heroes of that time like Luke Skywalker. The only hint of evil was in whether the bargain should have been made in the first place.
- The idea that the last wizard had to die in order to destroy the last dragon, that it meant magic was disappearing from the world, and that the church and the crown both took credit for it in the end… that all went completely over my head as a kid. I can appreciate it now.
I don't know if a movie like Dragonslayer could be made today. Either postmodern writing would ruin it by "deconstructing" (undermining) the heroic archetypes, or the studio would ruin it by turning it into an action-heavy blockbuster because that's the only thing that makes money anymore. Sure, the MCU has revitalized the heroic/superheroic archetypes, but it also depends on almost sixty years of comic book lore. I don't see the same thing happening with an original story. Even Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings substantially rewrote the characters of Aragorn and Faramir to make them more troubled and less heroic.
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Speaking of puppets in classic '80s fantasy…