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The Flight of Dragons

 
Movies:

The Flight of Dragons

  • Directors: Jules Bass; Arthur Rankin, Jr.
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure, Sword-and-Sorcery
  • Themes: Time Travel, Heroic Mission, Fish Out of Water
  • Release Year: 1982
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes

Plot

This animated fantasy film, from the creators of The Last Unicorn, unfolds in an age when magic and science coexist uneasily, and humans still walk the earth alongside wizards, unicorns, and dragons. One of the four most powerful mages on the planet, Carolinus the Green Wizard (voice of Harry Morgan) realizes that magic's power is slipping in favor of the logic of science -- a potential detriment to men, who need such magic to provide regular inspiration for themselves. Carolinus thus summons his three brothers for an emergency tête-à-tête, and suggests that they create a separate magical realm for themselves, via which they can send man the magic he needs on a regular basis. Two of the brothers agree, but the third -- the evil wizard Ommadon -- not only refuses to be shuttled off to this removed existence but vows to wage full-scale war on humankind with evil feelings and ideas. Because the rules of the universe forbid Carolinus and his other two siblings from going head-to-head with Ommadon, they must seek out a human hero with the power to stop him. Carolinus sends this request to the Fates. They, in turn, select Peter (voiced by John Ritter), who is, of all things, a man of science. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Cast

Victor Buono; James Gregory; James Earl Jones - Omadon; Don McLean; John Ritter - Peter Dickenson; Harry Morgan - Carolinus, the Green Wizard

Credit

Jules Bass - Director, Arthur Rankin, Jr. - Director, Maury Laws - Composer (Music Score), Don McLean - Songwriter, Jules Bass - Producer, Arthur Rankin, Jr. - Producer

Similar Movies

The Dark Crystal; The Hobbit; Legend; The Neverending Story; The Neverending Story II: The Next Chapter; The Sword in the Stone; Taro the Dragon Boy; Dungeons & Dragons: In Search of the Dungeon Master; The Black Cauldron; The Neverending Story III: Escape from Fantasia; Dragonheart
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The Flight of Dragons

Video cover
Directed by Jules Bass
Arthur Rankin, Jr.
Fumihiko Takayama
Katsuhisa Yamada
Produced by Rankin/Bass
Written by Romeo Muller (Screenplay)
Peter Dickinson (Novel)
Gordon R. Dickson (Novel)
Starring John Ritter
Bob McFadden
Don Messick
James Earl Jones
Music by Maury Laws
Don McLean
Distributed by ABC
Warner Bros.
Release date(s) 1982 Video Release (UK)
August 3, 1986 (USA)
Running time 92 min.
Language English

The Flight of Dragons is a 1982 animated movie produced by Jules Bass and Arthur Rankin, Jr. and very loosely based on the speculative natural history book of the same name (1979) by Peter Dickinson and the novel The Dragon and the George (1976) by Gordon R. Dickson. Released direct to video, it was finally aired as an ABC 'Movie of the Week' in 1986. Opening theme sung by Don McLean.

Contents

Plot

Peter Dickenson (John Ritter) is a poor, dreaming scientist/inventor who is transported into the failing world of magic. He meets three wizards, two dragons, and the beautiful Princess Melisande (Alexandra Stoddart), who is a Wizard's foster-daughter.

The green wizard Carolinus (Harry Morgan) summons his magic brothers to a meeting, their first in four centuries. Mounted on his house-dragon, Gorbash (voiced initially by Cosie Costa), Carolinus travels to the Temple of All Antiquity, and there meets his three magic brothers: the golden wizard Lo Tae Zhao (Don Messick), the blue wizard Solarius, and the red wizard Ommadon (James Earl Jones), accompanied by their dragons Shen Tsu, Lunarian, and Bryagh, respectively. He then proceeds to explain that the world of magic is dying. To save it, they must join together to create the 'Last Realm of Magic', a protected place where magic will live on after humans stop believing in it. Ommadon refuses to aid his brothers, and vows to dominate humanity by infesting humans with greed, in an attempt to stop magic's death by force. The only way to stop him is to take his Red Crown, the source of his dark magic. 20th century Peter, being descended from an ancient hero, is asked to begin a quest for this purpose.

The four magic brothers sit in council. From left to right, they are Lo Tae Zhao, Solarius, Carolinus, and Ommadon.

Before the journey begins, a magical mishap leaves Peter in the body of the house-dragon Gorbash (voiced by Cosie Costa when not voiced by Ritter-as-Peter). Knowing nothing about being a dragon or about magic, Peter travels with two other companions, a knight called Sir Orrin Neville-Smythe (Bob McFadden) and the dragon Smrgol (James Gregory). During the journey, it is Smrgol who teaches Peter the details of being a dragon.

At their campsite, Ommadon sends rodent-like creatures called sandmirks to attack the party with their insanity-inducing cries. The blue wizard Solarius offers the dead wolf Aragh (Victor Buono) his life back in return for the death of the sandmirk queen. He agrees to join the quest. Princess Melisande is put into a deep sleep by the cries while using her magical abilities to see the party. The group presses on, and they are attacked by Giles of the Treetops (voiced by Don Messick) and his elves because they are mistakenly suspicious of the dragons. The archer Danielle (Nellie Bellflower) saves the group because she recognizes Sir Orrin. Learning the truth, Giles and Danielle join the travelers.

They rest at an inn; but in the night, an enormous ogre attacks, destroying the inn, murdering the innkeeper, and kidnapping some of the party. Peter and Smrgol must rescue Sir Orrin and Danielle from the ogre's castle. During the fight, Peter is overwhelmed, so that Smrgol must intervene. In so doing, the older dragon kills the ogre and himself dies.

The survivors move on to Ommadon's Red Realm and defeat the gigantic Worm of Sligoff. They use magic gifts, a shield and a flute, to defeat Ommadon's spell of despair and to put a flight of dragons to sleep (including Peter occupying the body of Gorbash). The magic flute does not defeat Ommadon's dragon Bryagh (James Gregory), who kills Danielle, Aragh, and Giles. Sir Orrin slays Bryagh with his sword while being burned alive by dragon fire. Ommadon magically appears claiming victory. Peter reappears when he realizes that two things cannot exist in the same place at the same time. He uses his scientific knowledge to deny all magic; in a dramatic conclusion, Peter alphabetically lists as many branches of science as possible, and Ommadon, whose teachings and power are based on superstition and the ignorance of others, tries to match Peter's list with his own list of foul creatures (harpies, witches, demons, etc.) but cannot withstand Peter's onslaught of science.

The death of Ommadon allows the party to return to life. Carolinus arrives, along with the remaining two magic brothers, and succeeds in creating the 'Last Realm of Magic' but sadly concludes that Peter is gone from the magic's reach. Princess Melisande awakens from her slumber and informs them Peter appeared, gave her a kiss, and woke her. She asks to join him in 20th century Boston, and Carolinus reluctantly agrees.

Peter returns to his own time, sells the shield given to him by Solarius, and meets Melisande again who is selling Ommadon's crown. They embrace in the shop as Carolinus, riding Gorbash, flies away over the city waving farewell.

Production

The voice actors for Solarius and Antiquity were not credited. Antiquity was voiced by Paul Frees, but it is not known who supplied Solarius' voice.

Crew

Producers Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
Associate producers Masaki Iizuka, Lee Dannacher
Screenplay by Romeo Muller
Based on The Flight of Dragons by Peter Dickinson
Additional story material from The Dragon and the George by Gordon R. Dickson
Design by Wayne Anderson
Original score by Maury Laws
Title song by Jules Bass, Maury Laws
Title song performed by Don McLean
Additional material written by Jeffrey Walker
Animation coordinator Toru Hara
Storyboard and Animation directors Katsuhisa Yamada, Fumihiko Takayama

Distribution

Front cover of the Laserdisc release

Various VHS editions of the film have been released since its debut in 1982. There was also a LaserDisc release from which some VHS copies were produced. The LaserDisc release was made by PolyGram Video,there was also a Betamax release. A DVD was released under the Warner Archive brand on the 17th of November, 2009.

Soundtrack

The original score was composed by Maury Laws. The film's theme song, also entitled "The Flight of Dragons", was written and composed by Jules Bass and Maury Laws, and performed by Don McLean. An official soundtrack was never released.

See also

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Flight of Dragons" Read more