Watched: 05/20/2022
Format: Amazon Watch Party
Viewing: Unknown
Decade: 1980's
Director: Peter Yates
Even as a kid, I had no real affinity for Krull (1983). It arrived as part of the fantasy movie blitz of the 1980's, and I didn't see it in the theater. The trailer had some interesting imagery, but I just didn't watch it. At some kid's birthday, I watched the Fire Mares part of the movie, said internally "what the @#$% is this?", but wasn't super interested. But, as a kid with time on his hands and a VCR, eventually I watched the film. However, most of my memories of the story itself are from a comic book adaptation I picked up somewhere. I think we only bought the first issue.
About 16 years ago, Columbia House was in its death throes and had moved into DVD's. I gave it a whirl and picked up 11 DVDs for $11 or whatever, and among my pickings was Krull. Jamie and I tried to watch it, and I decided "this is boring" and we didn't try again. On a rewatch, I am not sure why we thought it was boring. It's not. That's not really the crime to which the movie could be held accountable.
In fact, it's a very, very pretty movie. The sets are immaculate and gigantic. The exteriors are all over Europe in lovely pastoral settings. There's some truly fantastic visual stuff happening, and in a lot of ways, the movie is genuinely well-directed when it slows down to have a beat or two. The director, Peter Yates, is no slouch and did one of my favorite new-to-me films from the past few years, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, which could not be more different if Yates had physically been trying to get as far away from that movie as possible.
But, real talk, they kinda forgot to give anyone but the asshole wizard any personality beyond the thinnest layers atop an archetype. It's weird. There's an exposition guy who tells the "prince" what to do. The price is princely (read: nice but dim), and the wise old man is wise. The stoic cyclops is stoic. Perhaps because the actor cannot see and therefore cannot move.