Dragonslayer, 1981 Screenplay Edition, by Wayland Drew. BCE. Hardcover with dust jacket, 183 pages, published by Ballantine Books.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Lots of fun, for Dragonslayer fans!,
By charles ballew (burbank, ca United States) - See all my reviews Its fun to see how the author expanded on the characters to create deeper and more interesting backgrounds than what you see in the film. For instance, he gives an amazingly brilliant explanation for why that horse magically appears at the end of the film. It seemed oddly unexplained in the movie, but in the book he explains that Galen has a special power to influence the behavior of animals, but he hasn't realized it yet. So although the plot of the story shows that Galen never actually had the magic powers he thought he had (they actually came from the wizard's crystal), he does have his own special power that he can go on to use in the future. There are numerous other wonderful extrapolations of film events to be found here, which you will have to discover for yourself by reading this wonderful book! chuck ballew
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting,
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This review is from: Dragonslayer (Hardcover)
The book was fairly interesting, it did have thrilling moments. However, it was not one of the books that left me feeling a bit of remorse that it was all over as some that I've read recently.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Dissappointing novelization of the film.,
This review is from: Dragonslayer (Mass Market Paperback)
On a lark, and having found a copy that I bought but never read, I packed this novelization of the 1981 film for a vacation. In the film, Peter Mcnichol plays a sorcerer's apprentice who fights against a dragon when his mentor dies. "Dragonslayer" is actually the story of a battle between two evils - both the dragon and a corrupt king who holds lotteries to choose who will be sacrificed to the dragon to placate it. The novel adds many elements, but doesn't do much with them. The place is Urland, an ancient British kingdom in England about the time of St. Patrick, with the ancient ways of magic and similar superstitions giving way to a new existence basd on the cross. Few take the Christians that seriously and look for salvation to the magicians when Vermithrax, the evil dragon, takes up residence in Urland's heartland. The author seems to want to draw a picture of what life was like in those days as a new faith swept Europe and the Roman occupation remained very real in the people's minds. He even draws a better picture of the relationship between the Dragon and the magicians without having to explain it so succintly that there's no mystery. unfortunately, he doesn't get that far before he goes back to battle with the dragon. He also misses one important plot element - the Dragon itself. With the world at a crossroad between the lore of magic and the faith of the cross, the dragon has a meaning that also changes. To Galen, the young magician, the Dragon is the last of his kind, a bitter old monster intent on making life miserable for whoever it sees. For the Christains, the Dragon is not a stubborn remnant of a dying age, but the devil itself, intent on aborting a nascent religion. Though Galen and magic is the hero, it's the christian viewpoint that seems more compelling. This book is the one that teaches that Vermithrax means "Worm of Thrace".
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