The weirdest thing about Wizards is that the movie isn’t particularly
weird. After all, the animated adventure was the first full-on fantasy film
from maverick animator Ralph Bakshi, who made his mark with the X-rated cartoon
feature Fritz the Cat (1972). Yet for
this project, which is a hybrid of Tolkein-esque medieval/magic tropes and
ecologically themed sci-fi, Bakshi mostly dialed back on the provocation and
concentrated on spinning a yarn. Unfortunately, the yarn isn’t very good.
In
the distant future, after man has turned Earth into a wasteland, two sibling
wizards—good Avatar (voiced by Bob Holt) and evil Blackwolf (voiced by Steve
Gravers)—battle for control. Avatar’s all about nature, since he’s a mellow
little dude who lives in a castle with a sexy faerie, whereas Blackwolf is a
demonic-looking creature ruling an army of hell-spawned monsters, homicidal
robots, and killer mutants. The bulk of the story depicts Avatar’s difficult
trek from his castle to Blackwolf’s lair for a final standoff, and a major
subplot involves Avatar’s conversion of one of Blackwolf’s assassins—a robot
whom Avatar captures and renames “Peace” (voiced by David Proval)—into a
soldier for good.
This is all exactly as heavy-handed as it sounds, though the
hipster prism through which Bakshi tells his tale makes the movie a bit more
palatable than it might have otherwise. For instance, Avatar is prone to saying
things like “this has been the biggest bummer trip I’ve ever been on.” He’s an
appealing character, even though his attitude and lingo now seem dated.
Bakshi
employs the crude but innovative animation techniques that were his ’70s
signature, occasionally sprucing up traditional cel-animation shots with trippy
backgrounds that are generated by optical effects. He also spotlights
herky-jerky images created by filming real actors and then tracing their basic
shapes onto film frames to provide an effect akin to moving silhouettes. (During
the picture’s climax, Bakshi takes the experiment further by integrating
live-action footage, cutting to real shots of airplanes and tanks while
Avatar’s army tangles with Blackwolf’s forces.) The oddest—and least
effective—of Bakshi’s gimmicks involves cutting to montages of still drawings
for transitional moments. As an uncredited Susan Tyrell soberly intones expositional
voiceover, renderings by comic-book/magazine artist Mike Ploog depict scenes
that Bakshi didn’t bother to animate. In addition to slowing down the action,
these transitional moments make the rest of the movie look crappy by
comparison, since Ploog’s drawings are beautifully detailed.
Another
significant problem with Wizards is
that Bakshi, who also wrote and produced the film, can’t decide on a consistent
tone—the movie lurches back and forth between action and slapstick and social
commentary. In short, it’s a mess. Still, every so often Bakshi’s mad-scientist
approach results in something exciting or funny or touching, and the one thing
the movie can’t be said to lack is imagination.
Wizards:
FUNKY
2 comments:
An entertaining mess. Saw the trailer for Star Wars when I first saw this in 1976.
OMG! They Killed Fritz!
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