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As a TV movie, it didn't have a poster. But I like this homemade one by Ursula Lopez on Redbubble |
The
Flight of Dragons (finished in 1982, not released until 1986)
Dir. by Arthur
Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass
Starring James
Earl Jones, John Ritter and Harry Morgan
[content warning:
burning to death, icky romantic behavior towards a child]
Plot:
Faced with
the weakening of magic caused by the rise of scientific reasoning, three of the
four great wizards attempt to seal off the realms of magic from the rest of the
world, only to be opposed by the Red Wizard Ommadon. To defeat him and save magic, they recruit a
knight, a dragon, and a man of science from the 20th century, Peter
Dickinson. However, before the quest can
begin, a magical mishap causes Dickinson’s mind to be placed in the body of the
dragon. The quest must go on, though, so
Dickinson has to save magic and learn to be a dragon at the same time.
Nostalgia:
My relationship
with this movie and its source material is an interesting one. It was originally produced as a TV movie, and
that’s how I first saw it, multiple times on cable somewhere between the ages
of nine and twelve. I never managed to
catch it at the beginning to tape it on VHS, though, and over time I completely
forgot about it. Flash forward to my
junior year in high school, and I’m an avid reader of fantasy novels. A friend in one of my English classes
recommends a book to me, The Dragon and the George by Gordon
R. Dickson, and lets me borrow a copy.
Through the first hundred pages or so, I had a growing sense of
familiarity with it, but couldn’t place where I was recognizing it from. Then I got to the sandmirks scene, and I
suddenly remembered. While the movie had
billed itself as being adapted from the book of the same name by Peter
Dickinson, the actual plot of the movie was from the Dickson
novel I was reading.
Review:
This is the
first request I’m doing for a review, and it actually turns out to be a movie
that I probably should have had on my list to begin with. The story I related above is actually one of
the “OMG” moments as a fantasy reader that I remember the most strongly. I’ll get into the differences between the
book(s) and the movie more later on, but for now I’d like to focus on the
actual movie itself.
Despite
being written and produced by an American production company, Rankin/Bass (most
famous for their stop-motion Christmas movies), it has a lot more in common
visually with 1980s anime. Of course,
this is because Rankin/Bass farmed the actual animation out to the Japanese
firm Topcraft, which also did the animated Hobbit movie and
The Last Unicorn (Topcraft itself would go bankrupt in 1985,
and was bought by Hayao Miyazaki and renamed Studio Ghibli. Yes, that Studio Ghibli). Like the two previous projects,
Flight of Dragons has a highly distinctive style that
immediately sets it apart from a lot of the other animation being aired in
America at the time. It also has a
top-notch voice cast. Other than a
couple cases where Bob McFadden’s British accent noticeably slips, I enjoyed
pretty much everyone. And you can never
go wrong casting James Earl Jones as an evil wizard.
Speaking of
the wizards, they were actually surprisingly diverse given the era that the
movie was produced. While the main
wizard character, Carolinus, is a white Gandalf type, the two other good
wizards are Chinese and ambiguously brown (though coded as Middle Eastern by
his costume). The movie also scores a
couple of points on the gender front, with a badass female archer joining the
quest and her gender never being called into question for it. Unfortunately, however, this is undercut
quite a bit by the other female character, Carolinus’s adoptive daughter
Melisande (and yes, I really want to put an R in there every
time I type it). Her only purpose in the
film seems to be serving as a love interest.
Not only does she have a love-at-first-sight plot with Dickinson, a
trope I hate, but there’s an even ickier bit between her and the knight, Sir
Orrin, that I’d completely forgot about.
While relating his backstory to Dickinson, he tells about meeting Melisande
for the first time when she was about five, and immediately vowing to fall in
love with and marry her, “when she was old enough, of course.” Umm….how about no? In fact, can we just take that whole
conversation and burn it, please?
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This feels like one of those joke contests where you have to come up with a funny caption |
This movie
is an amalgamation of two very different sources: a speculative non-fiction
book called The Flight of Dragons, in which a biologist
attempts to theorize how the standard mythological dragon traits (breathing
fire, etc.) could have evolved to work biologically, and a fantasy novel by
Gordon R. Dickson, in which a medieval history doctoral candidate and his
fiancée get transported to a fantasy version of 13th century
England, and he accidentally ends up in the body of a dragon. The two have very little to do with each
other, and are a fairly awkward fit together.
Most of the Flight of Dragons content comes in a
couple of scenes in the middle, where the narrative comes to a screeching halt
while Dickinson learns how dragons work.
I don’t know why they didn’t just adapt The Dragon and the
George straight through, as they’ve already got about 80% of the plot
present. Maybe they thought the character
(called Jim Eckert in the book), wouldn’t be as relatable to the target kid
audience if he was in his 30s with a fiancée?
If that’s so, why then have the entire final confrontation hinge on
Dickinson’s knowledge of science and mathematics, with him spouting off
multiple theorems and equations in rapid fire?
For being aimed at kids, there’s sure a lot of five dollar words being
thrown around.
The movie is
also incredibly dark for a kids’ movie.
Not quite Don Bluth dark, but there was a lot higher body count than I
was remembering. The final confrontation
ends with a near total party kill, with only Dickinson surviving. Yes, they all got brought back at the end,
but that doesn’t discount the scene of Sir Orrin literally getting set on fire,
then slaying the evil dragon that did it while he burns to death. There’s also a scene where
Dickinson-as-dragon and his elderly dragon mentor get incredibly drunk at an
inn and sing drinking songs together, while Sir Orrin and Danielle the archer
head off to a room holding hands after she proclaims it could be their last
night alive.
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Don’t know why scene didn’t give me nightmares as a kid |
So I did
enjoy this rewatch, but couldn’t help spending most of the running time
comparing it to the book. It’s a pretty
good kids’ movie (what nine-year-old wouldn’t want to turn into a dragon?), but
I’d actually recommend anyone interested to actually skip the film – it’s
pretty hard to track down at the moment, having only ever been released on DVD
as a burn-on-request title from Amazon – and read the book instead. It’s got pretty much all of the scenes that
this one does, plus a better ending (which is whited-out below for the spoiler-conscious).
Nostalgia: A-
Rewatch: B-
Stray
Thoughts:
-[ending
spoilers for The Dragon and the George - highlight to read]: In the movie, Peter Dickinson rejects magic and returns to the 20th century, with the Princess Melisande deciding to join him. In the book, Jim Eckert, a soon-to-be-married academic trying to live on student loans and his fiancee's teaching assistant salary, says "Screw that, I have a castle!" and stays in fantasyland. He becomes human again, and inherits the lands and title of an evil knight he'd defeated as a dragon. There are actually half a dozen more books, where he becomes a magical apprentice under Carolinus, learns to become a dragon at will, and is called into service fighting for the king in France.
-They
included pretty much every character from the book, except for my favorite:
Welsh archer Dafydd ap Hwyel. I guess
two archers would have been too much for them?
-There was
talk a couple of years ago about making a live-action sequel to the movie,
based on the second book in the series, The Dragon
Knight. I’m sure it’s been
dropped by now, since I would have heard something about it otherwise, but it’s
something I wish had been picked up.
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Cutest. Dragon. Ever. |
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