Wizards (1977) 6.2
On a post-apocalyptic Earth, a wizard and his faire folk comrades fight an evil wizard who's using technology in his bid for conquest. Director:Ralph BakshiWriter:Ralph Bakshi |
|
| 0Share... |
Wizards (1977) 6.2
On a post-apocalyptic Earth, a wizard and his faire folk comrades fight an evil wizard who's using technology in his bid for conquest. Director:Ralph BakshiWriter:Ralph Bakshi |
|
| 0Share... |
| Complete credited cast: | |||
| Bob Holt | ... |
Avatar
(voice)
|
|
|
|
Jesse Welles | ... |
Elinore
(voice)
|
| Richard Romanus | ... |
Weehawk
(voice)
|
|
| David Proval | ... |
Peace
(voice)
|
|
|
|
Jim Connell | ... |
President
(voice) (as James Connell)
|
|
|
Steve Gravers | ... |
Blackwolf
(voice)
|
|
|
Barbara Sloane | ... |
Fairy
(voice)
|
|
|
Angelo Grisanti | ... |
Frog
(voice)
|
|
|
Hyman Wien | ... |
Priest
(voice)
|
|
|
Christopher Tayback | ... |
Peewhittle
(voice)
|
| Mark Hamill | ... |
Sean
(voice) (as Mark Hamil)
|
|
|
|
Peter Hobbs | ... |
General
(voice)
|
|
|
Tina Romanus | ... |
Prostitute
(voice) (as Tina Bowman)
|
In a post apocalyptic future that appears as a blend of World War II Europe and J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, a pint-size wizard named Avatar must save the world from a band of fascist mutants controlled by his evil twin brother, Blackwolf, who likes to confuse enemy armies by projecting films of Adolf Hitler speeches during attacks. Painted live-action footage of advancing Nazi armies contrasts with Saturday-morning-cartoon-style animation of fairies and elves as Avatar travels through various magical and radioactive realms on his quest. Aiding him are the beautiful Fairy princess Elinore, hot-blooded warrior elf Weehawk, and Peace, a misunderstood robot rebelling against his Blackwolf-controlled programming. A bizarre and psychedelic meditation on magic vs. technology, this ultimate futuristic fantastic epic cult film still finds an audience on college campuses and will prove quite rewarding to viewers in the right frame of mind. Written by Anthony Pereyra {hypersonic91@yahoo.com}
Maybe it was because I saw this while staying up really late but I found Wizards boring after a while and a little confused as a result. Having said that, I did like some of the humor presented here, my favorite being the "They killed Fritz!" segment that I recognized as Ralph Bakshi's reaction to Robert Crumb's killing his beloved underground comic cat character after Bakshi's adopting Fritz for the big screen. Some of the battle scenes with footage of Hitler and his men and silhouette of various live-action movie battle reenactments of World War II mixed with animated depictions of blood also were pretty interesting. And the way the good wizard dealt with his bad wizard brother made a satisfying ironic touch to this magic vs. technology parable. It just seemed to fall apart, however, as the narration kept giving so much exposition that I just couldn't keep up. Maybe another viewing would clear my mind of all the goings on here but for now I'm giving this one a 5.