Movie · 1981 · Fantasy, Adventure · 1h 48m · PG · English
Curator score: 4.3/10 (39.7K ratings)
In the Dark Ages, Magic was a weapon. Love was a mystery. Adventure was everywhere...And Dragons were real.
Overview
A sorcerer and his apprentice are on a mission to kill an evil dragon to save the King’s daughter from being sacrificed according to a pact that the King himself made with the dragon to protect his kingdom.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.3/10
IMDb: 6.6/10
Letterboxd: 3.33/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 84%
Metacritic: 68
TMDB: 6.5/10
Director
Matthew Robbins
Production
Paramount Pictures, Walt Disney Productions
Cast
Peter MacNicol, Caitlin Clarke, Ralph Richardson, John Hallam, Peter Eyre, Albert Salmi, Sydney Bromley, Chloe Salaman, Emrys James, Ian McDiarmid, Roger Kemp, Ken Shorter, Yolande Palfrey, Douglas Cooper, Jason White, James Payne
Curator Review
Verdict
A grim, old-school fantasy with unusually strong practical effects and a genuinely memorable dragon. It’s slower and more earnest than modern adventure fantasies, but its dark mood, visual imagination, and unflashy sincerity still hold up.
Best for
fans of practical effects and creature work
viewers who like darker 80s fantasy
people interested in fairy-tale stories with a cynical edge
audiences who appreciate atmospheric worldbuilding over constant action
Skip if
you want fast-paced, joke-heavy adventure
you need polished modern CGI spectacle
you dislike slow-burn fantasy
you prefer heroic wish-fulfillment over bleak, fatalistic storytelling
Overview
Dragonslayer is one of the great oddities of early-80s fantasy: a studio-backed adventure that feels more like a medieval nightmare than a family crowd-pleaser. It leans into corruption, sacrifice, and the end of an age, giving the story a harsher, more adult texture than many of its contemporaries.
Worth noting
The film’s biggest asset is still its dragon, a practical-effects triumph that gives the movie real scale and menace. Even when the plotting is familiar, the tactile imagery and gloomy atmosphere make the world feel lived-in and dangerous.
Bottom line
It can be stiff and a little plodding, and some of the character work is more functional than deep, but the movie’s visual ambition and uncompromising tone are hard to dismiss. For viewers who miss fantasy with dirt under its fingernails, it’s a rewarding watch.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Sally Jane Black (4.5★) · 403 likes
This is everything I want in a high fantasy story: a strong woman who isn't negated or overshadowed, a bit of magic, storytelling that doesn't flinch from the grim parts, a depiction of royalty that is unflattering, and a cool fucking dragon. There's a trans reading of Valerian to be done, but a mild one, and really, it's not that complex. She is raised as a boy when she isn't. It's relatable. She has a relatively easy transition (being, well, a cis woman in disguise), but the idea that admitting you're not a boy could get you killed is just too familiar.
Kaijuman (4★) · 211 likes
A Walk Amongst Monsters #109
“Oh, I know this creature of yours... Vermithrax Pejorative. Look at these scales, these ridges. When a dragon gets this old, it knows nothing but pain, constant pain. It grows decrepit... crippled... pitiful. Spiteful!”
They just don’t make fantasy films like this anymore.
This is some exceptional old-school dark fantasy right here. Unapologetic, Straightforward, Incredible. It’s the end of the Age of Magic, and the people have called upon the last Sorcerer to slay the… more
Justin Decloux (4★) · 204 likes
DRAGONSLAYER fucking rules.
Pure spinner rack pulp fantasy without an ounce of shame. Efficiently brought to the screen by Writer/Director Matthew Robbins, a friend of Spielberg and Lucas, who snuck this one through the side doors thanks to every studio desperately wanting a Star Wars. Robbins promised Disney/Paramount a Fantasy version, and to their horror, he delivered a languidly paced romp about religious corruption, false idealism, and a princess getting her foot eaten off on-screen by a dragon puppet. Robbins… more
Hexagore (5★) · 130 likes
Watched the Paramount UHD 4K Blu-ray.
Discard your DVD's as this film was practically made to be experienced at the largest screen possible and with the benefits of HDR with enhanced sharpness, the right color grading, perfect contrast with deep shadows as this film has a lot of dark scenes (and an even darker tone). Probably darker than Ridley Scott's "Legend (1985)".
It's so good that the incredible work of ILM, Phil Tippett, Dennis Muren and Chris Walas reaches new… more
matt lynch (3.5★) · 124 likes
Not the most exciting thing ever conceived...there's an awful lot of not-particularly-inspired campy humor and ossified hero's journey stuff, which is can be rough even when your journeying hero isn't played by Peter MacNicol. But as far as your cinematic quests to kill dragons go, at the very least it clocks in at under nine hours and isn't a mess of CGI garbage. Speaking of dragons, the FX realization of the Vermithrax Pejorative (such an awesomely dorky name) is nothing short of an analog FX coup. Go-motion might be the most unwisely discarded technique ever.