FANS:
MEMORIES:
Cast:
Madmartigan... Val Kilmer
Sorsha...Joanne Whalley
Willow Ufgood ... Warwick Davis
Queen Bavmorda ... Jean Marsh
Fin Raziel ... Patricia Hayes
High Aldwin ...Billy Barty
Kael...Pat Roach
Airk Thaughbaer... Gavan O'Herlihy
Meegosh...David Steinberg
Vohnkar...Phil Fondacaro
Vohnkar Warrior ... Tony Cox
Vohnkar Warrior... Robert Gillibrand
Burglekutt... Mark Northover
Rool...Kevin Pollak
Franjean...Rick Overton
Cherlindrea...Maria Holvoe
Kaiya Ufgood ... Julie Peters
Ranon Ufgood... Mark Vande Brake
Mims Ufgood ...Dawn Downing
Druid...Michael Cotterill
Ethna...Zulema Dene
Barmaid...Joanna Dickens
The Wench ... Jennifer Guy
Llug...Ron Tarr
Mother...Sallyanne Law
Elora Danan ... Ruth Greenfield
Elora Danan...Kate Greenfield
Nelwyn Band Member...Kenny Baker
Lieutenant in Snow Village...Gerry Crampton
Nelwyn Band Member...Jack Purvis
Sorsha...Joanne Whalley
Willow Ufgood ... Warwick Davis
Queen Bavmorda ... Jean Marsh
Fin Raziel ... Patricia Hayes
High Aldwin ...Billy Barty
Kael...Pat Roach
Airk Thaughbaer... Gavan O'Herlihy
Meegosh...David Steinberg
Vohnkar...Phil Fondacaro
Vohnkar Warrior ... Tony Cox
Vohnkar Warrior... Robert Gillibrand
Burglekutt... Mark Northover
Rool...Kevin Pollak
Franjean...Rick Overton
Cherlindrea...Maria Holvoe
Kaiya Ufgood ... Julie Peters
Ranon Ufgood... Mark Vande Brake
Mims Ufgood ...Dawn Downing
Druid...Michael Cotterill
Ethna...Zulema Dene
Barmaid...Joanna Dickens
The Wench ... Jennifer Guy
Llug...Ron Tarr
Mother...Sallyanne Law
Elora Danan ... Ruth Greenfield
Elora Danan...Kate Greenfield
Nelwyn Band Member...Kenny Baker
Lieutenant in Snow Village...Gerry Crampton
Nelwyn Band Member...Jack Purvis
Studio:
Imagine, Lucasfilm, MGM
Release History:
1988 - Willow
It was a little bit Star Wars, a little bit J.R.R. Tolkien, and a whole lot of little people. Willow was what fantasy lovers fantasize about: magic, swords, dragons, and a cast of cheerable heroes, hissable villains, and loveable rogues.
The Star Wars connection was no coincidence. George Lucas wrote Willow's story and was its executive producer. Ron Howard, who had already brought fantastical creatures to the screen in Splash and Cocoon, came in to direct, and the cast included Val Kilmer and Warwick Davis (the future Leprechaun star).
The film, like many fantasies, opens with an evil sorceress and a solemn prophecy. The sorceress, Bavmorda, rules the land with her black magic, but legends tell of the birth of a special child, designated by a birthmark, who will one day bring about her doom. Bavmorda imprisons all expectant mothers, but when the girl is born, a brave midwife steals her away and sends her off on a raft to meet her destiny. The child, Elora Danan, comes to a rest near a village of little people, the Nelwyns. Farmer/magician-in-training Willow Ufgood takes in little Elora, and the village elders send him on a quest to return the girl to her people, the Daikini.
The quest is ever perilous, but Willow meets several helpful new friends along the way. Chief among them is Madmartigan, a Daikini warrior with a surly attitude. Big man and little man have their share of spats (mostly over Willow's not wanting to be called "peck"), but they need each other's help to face the foes in front of them: a two-headed dragon, Bavmorda's forces (led by skull-helmeted Kael and Bavmorda's spirited daughter Sorsha), and the evil queen herself, tucked away in the imposing castle Nockmaar. Willow and Madmartigan get extra help from the good sorceress Fin Raziel, a host of Daikini warriors, and a pair of tiny comic relief Brownies, but in the end, the fate of the world rests on the small shoulders of Willow Ulfgood and a baby girl.
Willow had enough special effects razzle-dazzle to earn two Academy Awards nominations (for Sounds Effects and Visual Effects), but it wasn't the box-office hit MGM had hoped for. Fantasy films traditionally have had a rough time in theaters, and Willow was unable to break the curse. The movie was by no means a flop, however, and many a fan still considers it the best fantasy film to date. Magic may or may not be the bloodstream of the universe, but for some, it's what going to the movies is all about.


















