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Video/DVD Review: The Flight of Dragons

Imaginative fantasy pits science against magic.
From our provider: CommonSenseMedia
Common Sense Rating:  for ages 6+ Stars: 5 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: NR  Studio: Warner Bros. Directed By: Jules Bass  Cast: John Ritter  Running Time: 98 min  Release Date: 08/03/1986  DVD Release Date: 08/13/1996 Genre: Fantasy 

What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that kids will see sword fighting, causing human casualties. They will also see dragons getting drunk, and, at one point, what appears to be the death of the entire human cast. On the other hand, the video's ongoing magic vs. science debate -- which includes some actual scientific explanations -- really gets kids thinking.

Families can talk about fairy tales. Who are they usually meant to appeal to? What are some of the traditional conventions? How does this one differ from other fairy tales you've seen?

In this animated feature, a present-day man is sent back to ancient times to save the dying realms of magic from the Modern Era. In the end, both science and imagination come out winners. As mankind moves away from magic and toward science, the wizard Carolinus (voiced by Harry Morgan) finds his powers weakening, although he's surrounded by dragons, fairies, knights, and princesses. Carolinus's brother, the evil Red Wizard Ommadon (James Earl Jones), offers to help by destroying all of human civilization! To defeat Ommadon, Carolinus summons the one person able to bridge the worlds of science and magic: a 20th-century sci-fi writer named Peter Dickenson (John Ritter). Dickenson relishes his magical quest -- until a spell gone wrong leaves his mind trapped in the body of a friendly dragon named Gorbash.

Few stories feel both traditional and modern. Rarer still: a fairy tale that appeals to middle-schoolers. Some of the animation is bland, but the smart story still soars and THE FLIGHT OF DRAGONS is one of the brainiest and imaginative fantasies around. This thought-provoking Rankin-Bass video is drawn from an obscure fantasy novel, The Dragon and the George, by Gordon R. Dickson. When Gorbash offers an enchanting biochemical explanation for fire-breathing dragons, or Carolinus shows off his library of yet-to-be-published books (including The Wizard of Oz), you know you've discovered an unusually savvy and enlightened fairy tale.

There's plenty of daring swordplay -- and lots of dragons -- to please young adventure-lovers, but older viewers have even more to relish. Repeated tributes to the many fields of science are inspiring -- especially during the climax, when Peter combats Ommadon's foul incantations by reciting laws of Newtonian physics. Dramatic theme music and engaging humor add to the appeal. The animation is decent, but not a strong point.

Quest for Camelot
Dragonslayer
The Sword in the Stone


Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.
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