Willow Movie Review
Willow Review

"Willow" Overview

Rating: PG
1988
Cast and Crew
Director : Ron HowardProducer : Nigel Wooll
Screenwiter : Bob Dolman
Starring : Val Kilmer,Joanne Whalley,Warwick Davis,Jean Marsh,Patricia Hayes,Billy Barty,Pat Roach,Gavan O'Herlihy
George Lucas and Ron Howard both love high adventure and, apparently, Hobbits.
Unfortunately, making a real version of Lord of the Rings is fraught with
problems, as some directors know, so Lucas and Howard teamed up on an original
short dude-goes-on-epic-adventure tale, this time having a "Nelwyn" named
Willow (ex-Ewok Warwick Davis) finding a baby in a river, whom he must then
protect from the evil Queen Bavmorda (Jean Marsh), who is seeking the baby to
destroy her thanks to the classic she-will-grow-up-to-destroy-me prophecy.
Willow teams up with a half-crazed human named Madmartigan (Val Kilmer),
rescues a shape-changed sorceress, battles a two-headed dragon (allegedly named
"Eborsisk" after a certain powerful pair of film critics) and converts the evil
queen's daughter (Joanne Whalley) from the dark side, all in two short hours.
Back in 1988, the digital special effects were groundbreaking -- with Willow
pioneering "morphing" technology (and detailed at length on a documentary
included on the special edition DVD. Today, they look a little silly -- no
fault to the film, it's just that computer effects were half-baked at the
time. The worst is the use of life-size actors playing nine-inch tall
"Brownies," shot against a bluescreen and inserted into the footage. It looks
cheesy, and their "comic relief" isn't really worth the problems caused by
pulling you out of the film's world.
Much has been made of Willow's similarity to the Star Wars universe -- the
rugged loner and the child that eventually turns from evil -- but those are
really just elements of classic fantasy. Willow in fact stands as one of the
great fantasy movies put the film -- in fact, it's one of the only fantasy
movies put to film, simply because working with magic, horse-riding armies,
endless swordplay, and period sets and costumes on this scale is exhorbitantly
expensive. Most of the time, Howard gets it right -- he's a bit heavy-handed
with all the good v. evil, but the film is a lot of fun for kids and adults --
with Kilmer's goofy swordsman the best character in the bunch. The special
effects aside (and you'll need to look past them -- there's even some
Claymation in here...), Willow is grand escapism.
The only other notable item on the DVD is an old making-of documentary, which
for some reason is one of the worst pieces of filmmaking ever produced
(Breathless narrator: "Willow... had to be a movie!"). Skip it, watch the
morphing bit, and see the movie -- with or without Davis's commentary track
running.
Use the force, Val.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





