I think a lot of people today think just because something is dark and gritty it automatically means it's higher quality.
Yeah, that's what I find so odd. It was true back in the '80s and '90s that going exceptionally dark and gritty was a daring and innovative thing that characterized prestige shows like, say,
Hill Street Blues or HBO's programming (and comics like
Watchmen or
The Dark Knight Returns), but it stopped being innovative decades ago, longer than much of the current target audience has even been alive. It's just conventional now, even expected. So it makes no sense anymore to equate it with innovation or quality. It's strange to me that the society is so stuck in the assumptions of a previous (i.e. my own) generation, rather than going through the kind of cyclical change I would've expected.
I mean, like, why do superhero shows and movies keep doing dark and cynical "deconstructions" of superheroes when a whole generation has grown up with nothing but dark and cynical superhero stories? It's not a deconstruction if it's just more of the usual. By this point, the deconstruction would be poking holes in the cynicism and reaffirming an optimistic take on superheroes (e.g. in the Superman story "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice, and the American Way?").
And I suppose the same would go for fantasy. A show that just copied the grim brutality of
Game of Thrones would merely be derivative and lazy. The fresher thing to do would be to reject that grimness and regain the sense of wonder in a fantasy world.
Come to think of it, isn't that basically what
Star Wars did? Cinematic science fiction in the 1970s tended to be bleak, dystopian, or coldly intellectual, so even though
Star Wars was just a derivative throwback to the children's movies and serials of an earlier era, it revolutionized sci-fi film by making it fun and exciting, even if critics at the time thought that came at the expense of its intelligence.
Willow didn't make the same kind of splash, but maybe that has something to do with the fact that it didn't contrast quite so strongly with preceding fantasy films like, say (off the top of my head),
Legend, Dragonslayer, Labyrinth, or
The Neverending Story.
I've grown tired of gloomy tv shows. I know it works both ways that just because somethings light doesn't mean quality either, but I do get the vibe that people aren't as willing to give a lighter show as much of a chance than a darker one.
Maybe there was a time when I felt that way, but these days, I'd rather watch something fun and uplifting than something self-consciously, relentlessly grim and hopeless. I mean, fun shows have room in them to go dark and intense. Joss Whedon's shows always struck a good balance of humor and darkness, as did something like
Veronica Mars, say. Japanese tokusatsu and anime shows tend to be good at embracing extremes in both directions, pivoting from utter goofiness to wrenching tragedy and back again. What makes it work is the balance. The darker parts have more meaning when they're contrasted with the light, and vice versa.
Admittedly I found the first episode of Willow to be weaker than the second. Those first 15 minutes were a little rough but then it settled into more of what I like about the movie. Not having Warwick for the majority of it hurt a little but I get that they were trying to establish the group of new characters. I loved Joanne Whalley in the pilot. She held things together until Willow could arrive.
It's kind of the opposite of the movie's structure. Aside from the opening sequence with the midwife rescuing Elora, the film starts with Willow and the Nelwyns, sticks with them, and reveals the larger world through their eyes. Okay, that's probably just because it was copying how
The Hobbit and
The Lord of the Rings did it, but it was nice that it treated Willow's world as the baseline and let us see the human/Daikini world through the Nelwyn's eyes as this mysterious, exotic land of giants. The series went about it the other way, starting us off with the human point of view and treating the Nelwyns as the outsiders, which is a lot more conventional. Although the second episode does a better job balancing the Daikini and Nelwyn viewpoints.