T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
617.1 | Information please. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Make each day a bit surreal. | Thu May 12 1988 10:39 | 2 |
| What is "Willow" about? Members of the genus Salix? Is it a fantasy?
SF? Pastorale? Forestry documentary?
|
617.2 | Definitely Fantasy | ARTFUL::SCOTT | Be there. Aloha. | Thu May 12 1988 19:26 | 8 |
|
To judge from the trailer, and a little "Making of ..." spot I saw on
The Movie Channel, it would seem to be Sword and Socery schtick. The
main character is a dwarf (or "little person", if you prefer) and there
would seem to be a couple of characters even smaller (about 8-inches or
so).
-- Mikey
|
617.3 | The Scoop on Willow | CIVIC::SWANSON | Jennifer | Tue May 17 1988 14:45 | 24 |
| I just finished the book (didn't realize when I bought it that it
was written from the movie and not the other way around).
It's about a wicked queen that rules a land (and is spoiling it
of course), and a baby with a birthmark is predicted to bring around
her death. So of course the wicked queen goes around killing babies,
and of course the good baby escapes. I won't tell you anything
else about it, because I don't want to ruin the story for you.
There are brownies and elves in it (the little people mentioned
in .2), and the main wizzard is from a race of small people (NOT
a dwarf!).
It wasn't a great book, but I think the movie will be a lot of fun
for all ages. Lots of twists and turns in the plot.
Have fun this weekend and see you at the movies!
Jen
P.S. Did you know there is also a computer game based on Willow?
It is just coming out too.
|
617.4 | Good maybe even very good | NRADM::WILBUR | | Tue May 24 1988 08:41 | 6 |
|
It was a movie for all ages. A good movie, not a great movie.
|
617.5 | Another review | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Make each day a bit surreal. | Tue May 24 1988 11:28 | 12 |
| I saw "Willow" last night and I agree with .4: it was not a great
movie, but it was a good movie. One entertainment it provides is
"spot the sources," for the thing is a patchwork of other stories
and ideas. (I realize that sword & sorcery is so thoroughly written
that any member of the genre must look like it is borrowing from
other members, but some of Lucas's borrowings are pretty specific.)
The action and special effects are, of course, very good. The plotting
is highly traditional, for good or ill (I don't mind it, myself),
and the dialogue so-so.
Earl Wajenberg
|
617.6 | | ARTFUL::SCOTT | Mike-O'-All-Trades | Tue May 24 1988 19:39 | 9 |
|
As an aside, this picture got soundly panned by 3 out of 4 TV movie
critics (only Michael Medved of "Sneak Previews" liked it). I heard
that they called some two-headed monster in the movie the "Sisbert"
after Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert (neither of whom could recommend the
movie): perhaps that will teach movie folk to take the names of critics
in vain. (Not that I give much weight to any critics 8^).
-- Mikey
|
617.7 | "Sisbert" | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Make each day a bit surreal. | Wed May 25 1988 10:40 | 4 |
| I heard the same rumor about the two-headed monster, but that name
was either cut from the final version or only a label given it in
production. No one names the monster in the course of the movie.
They just scream and run from it.
|
617.8 | | CSC32::VICKREY | IF(i_think) THEN(i_am) ELSE(stop) | Wed May 25 1988 19:00 | 1 |
| The book calls it an Ebersisk.
|
617.9 | who's the author | TSG::MAYNARD | Rich Maynard 296-6751 | Tue May 31 1988 13:21 | 2 |
| who wrote the book, I thought there might be one but I haven't seen
it in the book store yet.
|
617.10 | Most definitely a novelization... | HPSCAD::WALL | Desperado Under the Eaves | Tue May 31 1988 16:35 | 10 |
|
Jeez, every WaldenBooks in the Worcester area seems to have the
novelization. The cover features a fairly bad painting of Willow,
Madmartigan, and possible Sochsha.
I couldn't tell you who wrote it, as I haven't bought it. I have
seen it all over the place, though.
DFW
|
617.11 | WILLOW by Wayland Drew | TALLIS::SIGEL | | Tue May 31 1988 20:06 | 8 |
| Re .9, .10
The novelization of "Willow" is by Wayland Drew, and is published by
Del Rey books. The novel has been out for two months, much as "Star Wars"
was released as a novel a couple of months in advance of the movie's
release.
Andrew
|
617.12 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Wed Jun 01 1988 02:22 | 11 |
| re:.11
Actually, the novelization of STAR WARS was out six months before
the movie. I remember reading while eating my piece of Thanksgiving
pumpkin pie.
As for Wayland Drew, he previously wrote the novelization of
DRAGONSLAYER, and it's one of only a handful of novelizations
that are good novels in and of themselves.
--- jerry
|
617.13 | See it! | UCOUNT::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Wed Jun 01 1988 13:50 | 17 |
| I liked the movie a lot! At last somebody has done something with
what amounts to a "traditional fairy tale" (even if it is a "new"
story) in a live action film! A believable community of little
people (think of them as dwarves, hobbits, or something else, if
you like) with individual characters and a diverse mixture of nice
and not-so-nice folk. Magic that works and LOOKS magical. Landscapes
that do NOT look like LA!
I think Shelly Duval's Fairy Tale Theatre episodes were pretty good
for made-for-(pay)-tv, but would I love to see what this crew could do
with Brothers Grimm, Hans Andersen, or even Nordic Myth! Technology
seems to have just about reached fantasy level! at fun!!!
If you like fantasy, by all means, see Willow! The visual experience
alone is worth it!
Sherry
|
617.14 | Still glad I saw it, but.... | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:26 | 15 |
| The only problem with Willow is that most people have already seen
most of it, at least if they have seen:
Star Wars
Snow White
The Hobbit
Peter Pan
(read) the Bible
various Harrison Ford movies
etc, etc, etc.
Not a bad movie, but it 'borrowed' from a lot of places. "Story
by George Lucas" indeed!
Willie
|
617.15 | Meet Llug.... | HPSCAD::WALL | Desperado Under the Eaves | Thu Jun 02 1988 10:05 | 9 |
|
As far as I'm concerned, Val Kilmer made the movie. As others noted,
the rest of it has all been done before, but some of Kilmer's stuff
sent me into hysterics.
And James Horner managed to score the movie while only reusing one
theme he's used before.
DFW
|
617.16 | | FRAGLE::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Thu Jun 02 1988 13:35 | 8 |
| re: .14
I remeber hearing (way back when) during a Literature class that there
are a finite number of plots (I forget the number but I recall being
surprised at how low it was). Basically every story teller retells one
of these stories. How he/she does it is what makes it unique. Even
'Star Wars' (one of the ones that was mentioned as having been borrowed
from) borrowed alot from past works - and Lucas has even admitted it.
|
617.17 | Yabut let's not be so blatant... | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Thu Jun 02 1988 14:57 | 8 |
| Usually things 'borrowed' from other stories don't take chunks of
other things and insert them into the 'new' one without change.
Some of the graphics were straight out of Disney, I could hear a
scuba regulator in the background when the evil queen's champion
was introduced, and there was definately the sound of clashing
lightsabers when the sorceresses were fighting over the wand...
Willie
|
617.18 | "Nothing NEW Under the Sun!" | UCOUNT::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Thu Jun 02 1988 17:37 | 28 |
| Why does the limited originality bother so many people? Sword of
Sha-na-na was an even more direct ripoff of only one source and
it still has followers! Yes, Bavmorda (sp??) looks like Maleficent
(sp??), but how many ways do YOU envision an "evil queen" to look?
(Then again, I wish somebody would film Vinge's "Snow Queen"...)
OK, Willow and his people remind one of hobbits, but little people
prevail in myth and legend the world over, and some of them are
"homebodies" and some of them are miners. So what? There is a
certain purposeful sameness to fairy tales and myths...consider
it archetypal, if you like. It's not necessarily "bad" and using
established special effects in a different story is no worse than
using a familiar actor or for a daytime soap star to wear Joan Collins
latest gown in the next episode of some other show. Things get
borrowed...no big deal! (Is your life completely unique in every
way from everyone elses'? )
People go to see Rambo movies and Friday the umpteenth movies and
all those other really *rotton* movies and the nits don't get picked.
Yet make a really credible fantasy film and people see nothing
but the conceptual sources.
I hereby assign everyone to read Joseph Campbell's "Hero With a
Thousand Faces"!!! (Originality, tra-la! It's a GOOD movie!)
Harumph!
Sherry
|
617.19 | Too blatant. | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Thu Jun 02 1988 21:04 | 9 |
| Sherry,
Sorry, I did mention it was a 'worth seeing', but some of the
borrowing was a little too blatant for me. One scene of the evil
sorceress cackling with glee looked _exactly_ like a scene from
Snow White, and when the fairy swooped down and kissed Willow on
the nose I had this incredible sense of deja view [sic].....
Willie
|
617.20 | Another plus for the movie.... | ODIXIE::RIDGWAY | For one brief shining moment | Mon Jun 06 1988 13:14 | 4 |
| I'm surprised that no one has mentioned the Brownies. I thought
they were hilarious.
Regards, Keith R>
|
617.21 | More Old Plots | MORGAN::SCOLARO | | Mon Jun 06 1988 14:15 | 8 |
| Talk about reusing OLD plots, this movie took several ideas from
the Bible!
1) Evil ruler killing baby challengers (happened to Christ)
2) Babe in reeds, floating down river (Moses?)
Tony
|
617.22 | What about the Vedas??? Bible my *&^%&^ | CUSTOM::SAVKAR | | Mon Jun 06 1988 23:37 | 43 |
| Well, why don't we just look for phallic symbols imbedded in the
plot while we are at it!!!!
Come on, as was mentioned quite well earlier (note??), many themes
in both movies and literature often take ideas and concepts from
other sources. In fact, one can see the bible in almost anything
if you look hard enough (and strain things a bit). Everything from
A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, to J.R.R Tolkien's The Hobbit
utilize pieces and fragments from other works.
Indeed, it is the method by which the author creatively uses these
sources that makes the story good or not. It is not a question
of whether the material is pseudo-similar, but if the entire effect
of the movie is good or bad. I thought Willow was wonderful, and
the similarties between the hobbits and the "little people" delighted
me.
As a final comment, think of times in the past when you have needed
help, whether it be from a Thesaurus, a play, a piece of code, a
fellow employee, a fellow student (on a major exam!!), etc. Everyday,
everyplace in our lives we are just building our mountains upon
someone elses hills. We learn by experience...but where do we get
that experience --> from others.
The same is true of movies. You experiment. You use methods and
madness that have been used before, and you add more. You change
things. Is it the setting, or is it the plot that needs something
more?? If you can capture the audience once, is it any indication
of capturing the audience twice.
You all talk about seeing the same things twice, but frankly I think
your complaints would be better spent on things like Croc. Dundee
II, Rambo III, Friday the Thirteenth part 1000000, etc. You talk
about recurring themes; at least one cannot pinpoint these themes
exactly!!!! Argh!!!!
It was a great movie, cute, fun, semi-mindless, and a good waste
of money on a Friday night to take your girlfriend, wife, kids,
mistress, lover, etcetera to...
Hurumph, double time...
/Sunil
|
617.23 | Borrowings | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Make each day a bit surreal. | Tue Jun 07 1988 10:45 | 12 |
| I saw "Willow" and liked it well enough. I even rather enjoyed playing
the game of "spot the source" that it invites. I certainly don't
begrudge Lucas or any other storyteller the theft of themes and
dieas from other works. As Ursula K. LeGuin said in an essay, any
vigorous art is a hotbed of theft.
However, I did feel that the borrowings in "Willow" were a little
heavyhanded. Not enough to make it a bad movie, but enough to be
a touch distracting. I'm not sure what Lucas should have done to
aneal things better, but I wish it had been done.
Earl Wajenberg
|
617.24 | Lucas the flatterer | OXMYX::POLLAK | Counting trees, in the Sahara. | Tue Jun 07 1988 16:47 | 5 |
| Let us not forget that Lucas has copied other movies when he does
his films. C3PO in _STAR WARS_ was a copy of the robot from Fritz
Lang's _METROPOLIS_.
I found _WILLOW_ to be a good entertaining film, not great, just
entertaining. Which is sometimes hard to find these days.
|
617.25 | I was just thinking... | GLDOA::PENFROY | Paul from M!ch!gan | Fri Jun 10 1988 11:34 | 54 |
| I saw a lot a parallels to Star Wars in this movie, at least as
far a characterizations is concerned. I'll list them. Tell me what
you think. (The spelling of names may not be correct)
These could be spoilers so...
Magic = The Force
There was both good and evil uses for it, like the good and
dark side of the Force.
Willow = Luke Skywalker
Inexperienced hero trying to learn to master magic as Luke was
learning to use the Force.
Good Sorcerress (muskrat, crow, etc) = Obee Wan
Old, experienced master of magic, tutor to Willow. Obee Wan
likewise was Luke's tutor.
Brownies = R2D2 & C3P0
Comic relief, a few useful deeds, like the droids. I thought
those 2 Brownies looked and acted a lot like Lenny & Squiggy.
Madmartigan = Han Solo
Both were rouges, scoundrels, getting into trouble, etc. Unlikely
hero and assistant to main hero. Both get the girl in the end.
Sarsha = Princess Leia
Female warriors. Romantic interest for the scoundrel character.
Both were princesses, although on good verses initially bad sides.
Queen Bavmorda = The Emperor
Ultimate evil, master of evil magic, controller of all the bad
guys.
Chief Evil Warrior (complete with mask) = Darth Vader
Did all the dirty work for the evil queen. Head of armies. Darth
Vader was likewise the instrument of the Emperor.
Red-bearded Good Warrior = Chewbacca
Friend of the scoundrel character. They both were hairy. :-)
Good Warriors = The Rebellion
Good guys, seemingly outnumbered who were willing to risk their
lives for the cause of good.
Two headed dragon, Trolls = Snow Beast, Jaba's big monster, etc.
Monsters blocking hero's objective. Special effects outlet.
Now, I'm not saying that these parallels are bad. I just thought
it was interesting to look at them. I think maybe Lucas is
comfortable with this arrangment of characters having done 3 Star
Wars movies already.
|
617.26 | Hero with a Thousand Faces | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Make each day a bit surreal. | Fri Jun 10 1988 12:30 | 11 |
| Re .25
Also, a lot of those characters are found in a very large number
of myths and fairy tales. They're very durable and can stand lots
of repeated use.
Lest you ever doubted it would happen, there are now "Willow" action
figures (what we called "dolls" or "toy soldiers" when I was a tot)
available in the stores.
Earl Wajenberg
|
617.27 | Thousand Faces? That's a lotta Toothpaste! | CYRUS::SANKAR | Sam(17) Sankar--DTN 289-1945. Oops. | Mon Jun 13 1988 13:43 | 32 |
|
Disclaimer- I have not yet seen this movie, but do intend to
see it if I can find some $%^$#TIME#$(%#%!
I see no problems inherent in the 'borrowing' of ideas,
plots etc. from other authors/filmakers, whatever. I truly would
rather see an OLD plot or character done well, and with true
zest, than see a NEW plot done badly. It doesn't matter what
sources the person used, how badly they copied. It matters how
well they pulled it off and whether there was some redeeming
quality to the film. It seems as if everyone's the critic when
there's something you see that you can readily identify. My
brother hates to watch movies with me, because I keep chuckling
to myself when I see something he doesn't. People don't go to
plays with me because I worked in a theater for 4 years, and
watch the scenery and lights instead of the actors.
If we can't enjoy the damn thing and let ourselves go
every now and then-You know, release the macho SF junkie attitude
of 'Yeah, no big deal, I've seen it all' then we won't ever
have fun. At least at movies. Sorry. Flame Off. Whoops. #$&$%^!.
sam(17)
BTW: That wasn't really directed at anyone in particular. I
realize most of you DID have fun, and said so, but hey,
what the hell.
Re .21 You bring up a good point. .22's title punctuates
it. Even the Bible had its sources. Even the Vedas
had their sources. Wellll....maybe not the Vedas.
;-)
|
617.28 | Well, *I* liked it! | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Tue Jun 14 1988 03:15 | 20 |
| I finally saw it the other night. Like Sherry, I liked it a lot,
and it's of a type of fantasy that I usually don't care much for.
Perhaps because of the discussion here, I just went with low
expectations (to be honest, when I went, I was more interested
in seeing the trailer for WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT? than I was in
seeing WILLOW). True, it wasn't very original, but I rather see
it as sort of the quintessential fantasy film.
I thought the whole cast did well (though Sorsha was a bit non-
descript). Jean Marsh -- who I became very found of from UPSTAIRS,
DOWNSTAIRS -- makes an excellent villain once again (she was the
villain in RETURN TO OZ, too). It was nice to see so many "little
people" actors get some work. Makes me think that a live-action
LORD OF THE RINGS *could* be done. And, yes, the Brownies did
remind me of Lenny and Squiggy as well, but I'm pretty sure it
wasn't the same actors.
Not an outstanding film, but one that's thoroughly enjoyable.
--- jerry
|
617.29 | | CHOVAX::YOUNG | Dumb, Expensive, Dumb ... (Pick Two) | Tue Jun 14 1988 20:21 | 4 |
| Re .28:
Actually Jerry, I was curious to know if you'd notice that Mobeius
was one of the (2) artistic consultants.
|
617.30 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Wed Jun 15 1988 01:42 | 7 |
| re:.29
Yes, I did, but I didn't think it that significant. He's done the
same for other movies (ALIEN, for example -- no, I'm not thinking
of Giger; Moebius did some work on it as well).
--- jerry
|
617.31 | my opinion | YODA::BARANSKI | The far end of the bell curve | Fri Jun 17 1988 15:38 | 16 |
| Well, I finally saw it... walked in blind not knowing a thing about it...
My opinion? I didn't really like it. Too Slow in the beginning and too fast in
the end. Too many short scenes of slogging_across_the_world_through_
the_wilderness_yet_again. Too many jumps in scene changes. Very little
character development except for Willow (even for Willow!). And the stolen
plot... (censored)
And I'm usually quite easy to please! I'll probably go see the movie again to
figure out the parts I missed, but that's the reason I'm going, not because I
really liked it.
Sure, the scenes were great, the action was great, but there's more to a
*"good"* movie then that.
Jim.
|
617.32 | So what if the plot's a little well used ... | MPGS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Mon Jun 27 1988 09:21 | 12 |
| I liked it a lot. Sure, like everybody has said there's a lot of
borrowing from other sources. Some I haven't seen mentioned are the
appearance of the good witch, which reminded me of a scene from the
Wizard of Oz, and the trolls, which looked like the mean beasties in
The March of the Wooden Soldiers. But the movie was a hell of a lot
better than some of the "classic" butcheries I've seen (Dune and LoTR
come immediately to mind). I'd put it in the same category as Raiders
of the Lost Ark. Namely, good clean entertainment. If you're going
with a critical eye, maybe you shouldn't bother. If you just want a
light evening's worth of entertainment I'd recommend it.
... Bob
|
617.33 | Wasted my time. | ROCHE::HUXTABLE | | Tue Jun 28 1988 12:03 | 70 |
| I went to see Willow this weekend. I went expecting
fair-to-middling entertainment, but nothing really
outstanding. I didn't think I'd gone with a critical eye,
but...
I won't be recommending this movie to anyone.
(Spoilers follow.)
The plot was fair, a reasonably classic fairy-tale sort of
plot. It tickled me that the child prophesied to overthrow
Queen Bavmorda was a girl, not a boy. Since it was a fairy
tale, I was (almost) willing to overlook Queen Bavmorda's
lack of sense in rounding up pregnant women so she could kill
their babies after birth--why not kill the women first? And
we *did* get a rationale for this later, when Bavmorda
implied it wasn't sufficient to merely kill the baby, her
soul must be destroyed in accordance with a ritual.
Mad Maurigan and Princess Sorcia (sorry if I've missed the
spellings) seemed to have little reason to endanger
themselves to save Elora Dannon's life/soul. Oh, yeah, they
were acting out of the goodness of their hearts--something we
hadn't seen much of until then.
And I almost laughed at the ridiculous scene in Sorcia's
tent. Here's a woman who's highly trained in warfare and
skilled with a sword (witness a later scene with her chopping
up guards/sorcerers in her mother's tower) waking up to find
an enemy man crouching over her bed, protesting eternal love.
Does she kill him and then go looking for whatever he was
presumably diverting her attention from? No, she holds a
knife at his throat and says something brilliant to the
effect "I'll kill you if you don't leave." Huh? Where's the
warrior princess? Okay, okay, so she was love-starved, and
hearing endearments from an unwashed, ragged enemy melted her
heart. But for crying out loud, she was a *princess*, and a
princess is *supposed* to hear suitors spouting inane
nonsense in the hope of winning her hand. Love at first
sight, I guess. (I noted that Princess Sorcia's first sight
of Mad Maurigan was in a dress and makeup.)
I thought the acting was wooden, particularly Queen
Bavmorda's, and Willow's didn't impress me much either. The
Princess' wasn't too bad, and Maurigan's was also fair.
The "comic relief" I presume the brownies were intended to
provide seemed always to be just a little off in timing or
something.
I found it difficult to believe that the good witch Glinda
(sorry, I don't remember her name in this movie) would give
away a powerful magical talisman to an untrained sorcerer
(Willow) so he could do in Bavmorda with it. Why couldn't
she do it? There are all sorts of rationales in most magical
systems why she couldn't have directly intervened, but why
didn't we hear one? I was also surprised, given the sort of
magical system they seemed to have, that most people--
including sorcerers--seemed quite willing to tell people
their true names. True names are usually handles for
heavy-duty magic.
I guess it sounds like I'm picking nits. But this movie just
didn't hang together for me; I didn't believe the characters,
and I was quite simply bored during large parts of the movie.
If you want to see it, go ahead, plenty of people have seemed
to enjoy it--but I'd recommend going to the twilight show.
-- Linda
|
617.34 | just a trivia spot | OXMYX::POLLAK | Counting trees, in the Sahara. | Tue Jun 28 1988 15:53 | 6 |
| Just a piece of trivia. You can skip this if you want.
After seeing Willow I was racking my brains for where I'd seen Val
Kilmer (Madmartigan) before. The face was so familiar. Then a series
of events happen that lead to an answer. He was Tom Cruise's arch
rival in the movie Top Gun. He was Iceman. What a difference!
|
617.35 | Smart People on Ice | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Tue Jun 28 1988 19:17 | 5 |
| re:.34
He was also the head genius student in REAL GENIUS.
--- jerry
|
617.36 | one other place... | HAZEL::STARR | You ain't nothin' but fine, fine, fine! | Wed Jun 29 1988 13:58 | 6 |
| re: .34
He was also in TOP SECRET (the comedy by the same
people who made AIRPLANE).
Alan S.
|