Wizards (Twentieth Century Fox, 1977)
I first saw Wizards at the strange age of seven, when a baby-sitter
attempted to pacify me through video. On the afternoon lineup were a
couple of Disney movies, a reel of old black and white cartoons, and
this one video to which the store had lost the box. But they were pretty
sure it was a cartoon, so show it to the kids. I mostly ignored the other
films; they were fun, but standard kiddy fare. And then this mystery
film came on the screen. It started with no bright colors, no music,
just a picture of a huge book and a dry-voiced narrator introducing the
story as : "An illuminating history of the battle fought between technology
and Magic…"
I was stunned. There was a battle! There were hideous ugly
mutants! "The world blew up in a thousand atomic fireballs" ! Some one
had made a fantasy cartoon without assuming that the audience had brains
of tapioca! I was hypnotized until the movie ended and then demanded
to see it again. And again. And then it disappeared back to the video
store, and I lost it for years. But eventually I hunted down the tape,
at the far more cynical age of 15, and was happy to discover it had lost
none of its punch.
So what about Wizards managed to catch a seven year old's
notoriously short attention span and entertain a teenager suffering
from fantasy overload? Certainly, the basic plot was nothing special. In
Magic's corner, representing the forces of good, nature, and free love,
are the elf Weehawk, the fairy princess Eleanor, and the Wizard Avatar.
They set off to put an end to Avatar's evil brother, Blackwulf, who
is backed by hoards of stupid mutants and W.W.II era technology, but who has
still managed to lose the war so far. Good vs. Evil, fairies vs. mutants...
pretty standard stuff.
What sets Wizards apart is how Bakshi handles the stereotypes.
Eleanor swings her sex appeal around like a weapon, playing the
naïve as a political tool. Most delightful to me are the elves.
At a time when Tolkien influence had seeded fantasy with languorous elves
prone to reminiscing at the drop of a hat, Weehawk and his fellow elves
were nasty, brutish, and short. There are fat little fairies, weirdly
incompetent robot soldiers, and religious parodies that blew right by
me the first time I saw it.
Not to say that Wizards is subtle... Bakshi has been accused
of many things; subtlety is not one of them. The Blackwulf/Hitler
comparison is made as obvious as possible, with the aid of giant swastikas
painted on everything . The mutant/robot armies alternate between comically
moronic and cruel, and the characters are painted in giant sweeping
strokes. And, this being a Bakshi film, rotoscoped Nazis, Vikings,
and Zulus(!) march about the proceedings with abandon. But, the weird sense
of fun running through the whole thing keeps the heavy symbolism from getting
oppressive .
In the end, Wizards is a cult film. Like other cult films,
it's not necessarily perfect, but it is always energetic. The small
budget is
often grievously obvious, and the plot is simplistic at best, but
Eleanor shows more personality in five minutes than the average Disney
heroine in an entire movie. If you need your fantasy sleek and pretty,
this probably isn't the film for you. If you're willing to accept
some grit in the course of something a little different, give
Wizards a try.
[ Sarah Meador ]