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The Willow Series Has a Giant Sorsha-Shaped Question at the Center

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The Willow Series Has a Giant Sorsha-Shaped Question at the Center

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The Willow Series Has a Giant Sorsha-Shaped Question at the Center

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Published on December 7, 2022

Screenshot: Lucasfilm
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Willow series, Sorsha
Screenshot: Lucasfilm

The Willow television series has begun on Disney+, and already garnered reviews that seem either bafflingly positive or suspiciously over-negative. (The internet does set us up for these sorts of takes, I’m afraid.) In fact, the opening two episodes display a great deal of promise, but it’s impossible to tell if the show is capable of creating a satisfying meal from the pieces it’s ground down.

And a lot of that will come down to how it chooses to treat the character of Queen Sorsha.

[Spoilers for Willow series premiere.]

For those who are a little shaky on their Willow history, a brief reminder: the film follows the quest of a Nelwyn named Willow Ufgood and his fighty, smart-mouthed Daikini companion Madmartigan as they care for the infant to-be empress of Tir Asleen, Elora Danan, and stop the evil sorceress Bavmorda from taking over their world. In the process, they manage to get Bavmorda’s warrior daughter Sorsha on their side because she falls in love with Madmartigan. They are also aided by an old sorceress named Raziel, who is stuck in various animal forms for much of their journey. Willow, desperate to be a sorcerer himself, is gifted a magic wand and plenty of tutelage, but ultimately uses sleight of hand to save the day.

Willow is a funky little cult classic, which means it has a unique advantage in the reboot era—the stakes for its success are less dire than stories with intended decades worth of cash flow attached to them. With this delightful film, the questions surrounding its continuation are likely less ‘how do we make this continue forever and sell merchandise to kids every holiday season?’ and more ‘why not try something unique (for a corporate, very safe definition of the word) because this is a great playground for it?’

The result is a series with a few lovely curveballs tucked in—set about twenty years since the film, we find that Sorsha and Madmartigan had twins named Airk (aw, their dead buddy) and Kit, and Willow hasn’t been seen in many years. Neither has Elora Danan, and for good reason—Willow had a vision that her ascension would bring about the destruction of their world, and so it was agreed to hide her away for her own safety. Madmartigan is also nowhere to be found, his children believing that he abandoned his family. Kit’s best friend Jade yearns to be a knight, and is about to leave the kingdom to begin her training right as Kit is set to be married off to Prince Graydon from a neighboring kingdom for the sake of “stability.” Airk is flirting with a kitchen maid he calls Dove, who is utterly smitten with him.

Willow series, Sorsha, Airk, Kit
Screenshot: Lucasfilm

Things quickly go awry when Kit lets Jade know that she wants no part of her marriage and kisses her, Tir Asleen is attacked by evil creatures who kidnap Airk, and a quest is suddenly assembled to retrieve him. Dove sneaks off to accompany the party because she loves Airk that much.

It’s a tickling alteration on the standard format: The prince gets to be the damsel in distress, and the two “jocks” of the questing group are young women who happen to be in love. So far, so lovely.

This all gets far more complicated when the band finally reaches the home of Willow Ufgood, the sorcerer Queen Sorsha told the group to seek out for aid. He takes one look at Dove and utters some magic words to reveal a familiar sigil on her arm—she is Elora Danan, and now they’ve got a much bigger problem since the intended future-empress has wandered far from home and never even attempted the magic she needs to master in order to protect herself or her kingdom.

So the quest to find Airk and teach Elora magic have become clearer, but there’s still much more to be done. And so much of it relies on a figure who thus far isn’t receiving the attention she deserves: Queen Sorsha.

To begin, it’s disheartening in the extreme that Sorsha isn’t an active part of the quest, less from a logic standpoint (obviously someone has to stay back and rule the kingdom), and more for the fact that the questing group has zero older women in it. This is effectively a step down from the original film, where Raziel served as a sort of Merlin figure to Willow—a role that women are seldom permitted to inhabit, particularly when they are elderly, and the movie managed without bluster. As it stands, we currently have a group with several women under the age of thirty, one young man, and several more men from their thirties into middle age. Not a great look in terms of suggesting who’s allowed to play “active” roles in stories.

But more to the point, and as far as we’ve learned, this world has been entirely shaped by Queen Sorsha’s choices over the past decades. And this matters even more when we stop to think, for even a moment, about her story in the initial film. A story that is largely overrun by the antics of Madmartigan, the determination of Willow, and the fate of Elora Danan herself.

Sorsha was the daughter of an evil sorceress queen who imprisoned all pregnant women in her realm after learning of a prophecy about a baby who would bring about her downfall. A fearless warrior of impressive skill, Sorsha did everything her mother asked until falling in love with Madmartigan resulted in her switching sides, fighting against Bavmorda unto her defeat.

But the thing about Sorsha’s turn is, really, it hardly takes a thing.

Sure, Madmartigan is charming by a half, but he’s hardly a reliable bet in the romance department. It’s so clear that Sorsha is looking for an excuse to get away from her mother’s influence. She grabs the first substantial out she’s given with both hands and uses it to end Bavmorda’s reign once and for all.

Willow series, Sorsha
Screenshot: Lucasfilm

Sorsha is the queen of Tir Asleen now, which means that despite her mother’s misdeeds, she proved herself so well that no one took issue with her being in charge. But there are decisions that she’s made in the intervening years that are clearly being swayed and informed by her own trauma, and so far the series has only barely glanced at that motivator—specifically in the moment when Kit tries to take her mother to task for her impending forced marriage. Sorsha lets Kit know that she has little sympathy for her daughter’s unhappiness given what her own mother made her endure. It’s a brief thought that hardly scratches the surface of how she’s handled her role as queen, and how her past has affected the person she has become. So far, the story is far more focused on the next generation and the eponymous lead character himself—all of whom deserve that focus, of course. But Sorsha should receive the same level of consideration and development given how her choices have molded the lives of everyone around her.

Perhaps the most upsetting of these choices: We have learned that Madmartigan did not abandon his family, but went on a quest to locate a set of mythical armor at Sorsha’s behest… and for some reason, this was not communicated to his children from the start. I’m sure the two of them thought this was for the best somehow, that refusing to tell the twins what Madmartigan was really doing would prevent them from trying to search him out on their own, but letting your kids think their dad went out for a pack of pipeweed and never came back is far more damaging to them in the longterm.

We are also shown the fallout with Willow, one that occurred following a vision the Nelwyn had about Elora Danan’s future. Sorsha and Willow disagree about how they should respond to this vision—in Willow’s mind, it’s time for him to begin training Elora in sorcery, while Sorsha believes that it will increase their collective safety if the girl’s identity is hidden (even from herself), and the magic forgotten. It is never once pointed out to Sorsha that her feelings on magic might perhaps be a little, shall we say, shadowed by what she witnessed in her own mother. And when Willow tells her that she shouldn’t be worried about this because he’s a great sorcerer, she replies by gently telling him that.. well, he’s not really.

This sets Willow off, resulting in his subsequent storming from the castle, and a promise that he will only look out for him and his own people forthwith. It’s a segment of scenes treated as simple flashback when nothing could be further from the truth—what we’re seeing, in fact, is both Willow and Sorsha’s pain and flaws expertly dragged out and stomped all over. Sorsha’s not wrong about Willow’s abilities thus far; he’s certainly connected to magic, but his skills as a sorcerer are remote and largely untested. That doesn’t change the fact that saying so to his face was hurtful. And Willow’s not wrong that Sorsha is likely handling Elora’s destiny in a manner more designed decrease her own worry than to benefit the child and the future. That doesn’t mean that he couldn’t have found a different argument in favor of giving Elora the training he believed she needed, or that leaving in a huff after vowing to cut his dearest friends out of his life was the right move.

Willow series, Willow
Screenshot: Lucasfilm

Ultimately, Willow is the character we’ll be spending more time with—he’s with the quest group, he needs to be available to teach Elora, and the series does bear his name. I’m glad for that because Willow is an excellent character who deserves far more attention paid to him, flaws and all. It’s delightful watching the series highlight everything that makes him compelling years down the road, from his compassion and kindness to his fear of being insignificant to the irascibility that rears its head whenever people upset or disappoint him. But Sorsha is a cornerstone of this story too, and so far, she’s not being shown the same level of consideration.

The series has plenty more episodes to prove me wrong, so we’ll see where we end up. But the question of whether or not Sorsha’s past is put to constructive use in this sequel of sorts will ultimately determine its success for me. It’s nice to see the younger generation come into their own, great to see queerness woven into the story without so much as a remark, wonderful to see Warwick Davis back in one of his greatest roles, but Willow is beloved for a few more pieces that deserve their due. Let’s hope the show is up to the task.

About the Author

Emmet Asher-Perrin

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Emmet Asher-Perrin is the News & Entertainment Editor of Reactor. Their words can also be perused in tomes like Queers Dig Time Lords, Lost Transmissions: The Secret History of Science Fiction and Fantasy, and Uneven Futures: Strategies for Community Survival from Speculative Fiction. They cannot ride a bike or bend their wrists. You can find them on Bluesky and other social media platforms where they are mostly quiet because they'd rather talk to you face-to-face.
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Brent
2 years ago

Any thoughts to whether MadMartigan will, in fact, be in this show, given the medical status of the actor who plays him?   I mean, they found a way in Top Gun II, so surely they could find a way here.  And it would be pretty cool.

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

Well, Sorsha wasn’t in episode 3, so that doesn’t bode well. Although the end implies that we may be getting deeper into the Bavmorda backstory, so that might reconnect to Sorsha’s past or lead to more flashbacks.

It would be nice if the series retroactively gave Sorsha a better motivation for turning on her mother than just “Hey, that guy who hit on me in my bedchamber made me feel pretty and is really hot when he fights, so I think I’ll betray a lifetime of loyalties so I can marry him.” Apparently there was a deleted scene where she saw her father petrified at Tir Asleen and realized Bavmorda had lied to her all her life, which would’ve improved her character arc immensely.

 

Hey, you know what? I just realized that when Sorsha turned against her mother, she became the equivalent of a masterless samurai. So she was a Sorsha Ronin.

And if Princess Kit took on a protegee, they would be The Sorsha Heir’s Apprentice.

Avatar
2 years ago

This was an interesting read, but I do disagree in regard to two points:

a) The movie is not particularly strong or subtle on psychology. Sorsha’s change of heart comes out of the blue, right after Madmartigan swears eternal love to her, and that’s that. Anything else one reads in it is either speculation or stems from the novelization, which I haven’t read, but which I understand filled out the story and added depth to the characters.

Sorsha is a much more interesting character in the series, just as she is. And she is fulfilling her role in it. Neither the story told in the movie nor the one in the series is about Sorsha. At all. Which brings me to my second point.

b) I, too, am very happy with the unusual set of characters we have been presented with. Two powerful young women who are not conventionally feminine and who also seem in love with each other, a skirt-chaser on the brink of reform, a bookish, sensitive, not very martial prince, and a Cinderellish kitchen maid who turns out to be the prophesized Savior of the World. And there is Willow, of course, and the Madmartigan-like, rascal-with-a-heart-of-gold Boorman. Not to mention the mosaic of races shown.

Why do we need to check out more boxes? If an older woman is added to the quest, should we then bemoan the absence of an older, Gandalf-like male character?

Again, this is not Sorsha’s story, never was. That would make for a very different series, preferably one named “Sorsha.”

 

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

@3/flizzarga: Sure, I’d be game for a Sorsha spinoff. They could do a whole soap opera around her and call it Sorsha for Tomorrow. Or do a parallel-universe thriller — Sorsha Code.

Okay, I’ll stop now. (Maybe.)

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DontCallMePeck
2 years ago

Bennett, “The Sorsha Heir’s Apprentice” made my morning! I’m still chuckling about it 10 minutes later and had to come back to comment on it. :-) 

A good pun day to you, sirrah.

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2 years ago

:

“Sorsha Ronin”

“The Sorsha Heir’s Apprentice”

“Sorsha for Tomorrow”

“Sorsha Code”

 

PLEASE. DON’T. STOP. I’M. DYING.

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2 years ago

This article: https://www.lucasfilm.com/news/forget-all-you-know-behind-the-story-and-creation-of-willow/ makes a great case for an “extended edition” Willow release, one with most/all the missing scenes remastered and reinserted.

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David Pirtle
2 years ago

When it comes right down to it, Sorsha was just not very interesting in the film. She barely has any lines once she switches sides for no good reason. I would have liked to see her fleshed out more in the show, but I’m not going to be too broken up about it if she isn’t. There are enough interesting and diverse characters in this show to focus on.

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David Pirtle
2 years ago

I will agree that it would benefit the show to have an older woman as an active hero, since the villain is literally called The Crone.

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

We had a heroic mature woman all too briefly in this week’s episode — Hannah Waddingham’s Hubert. Eccentric, to be sure, but heroic.

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2 years ago

I think we’ll get more Sorsha near the end of the series. The show has been dropping hints about [potential spoilers I can’t remember how to format.]

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Evrett
2 years ago

Sorsha was likely contaminated with the dust of broken heart rather than just ditching her family loyalty for some random dude who showed up in her tent. Confined space. Maddies’ face got covered in it and hes trying to kiss her.

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

@12/Evrett: “Sorsha was likely contaminated with the dust of broken heart…”

That would make it far, far worse if it were true, because then she would’ve just been roofied into falling for Madmartigan, and it would completely take away her choice and agency.

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2 years ago

I think what grates me more is the heightism. The original didn’t follow the Nelwyns besides Willow all the way through, even dumping Migosh at a certain point, but at least there were several actually developed characters played by little people in that film, with entire scenes in the Nelwyn village and not a daikini in sight (besides a baby). The show could have been a great platform for several developed Nelwyn characters. We got one episode with their village, and I thought that Anabelle Davis was really shining with just a few minutes of screen time. I found myself wondering why she wasn’t going with them. 

And then this week, they killed off Silas, so now the only little person in the party is Willow.

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2 years ago

@@@@@ OMG Hubert! I LOVED her character, and was quite shocked by what transpired. It was surprisingly painful, and made me respect the show a little more.

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David Pirtle
2 years ago

@10 We had a heroic mature woman all too briefly in this week’s episode — Hannah Waddingham’s Hubert. Eccentric, to be sure, but heroic.

I really liked that character, too! I was so disappointed when they killed her (and her partner) off so soon after introducing her. She was a lot more fun than some of the regular characters.

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jeffronicus
2 years ago

The tone of the show shifts wildly between light-hearted banter and grimdark in a way that seems either clunky or inspired, I’m not sure which yet. There’s not as much of the whimsy as the movie had, other than Willow’s magical misfires, like the one that allows Ballantine and his soldiers to escape with Elora that no one comments on afterward.

You get weird scenes that seem to be the start of something mystical — Elora escaping from the soldiers and running into the forest while the storm gathers above, having a woozy time, then breaking into a sunlit clearing with the two nonplussed woodswomen. There’s a hint that maybe they’re forest spirits — they’re oddly not bothered by the armored demons that just walked up, and we haven’t actually seen any *people* anywhere outside the original town and the Nelwyn cave that might buy the wood they cut. And then they’re brutally cut down, to Elora’s horror.

I get the sense that there are a lot of emotional beats that the series wants to hit, but they’re just loosely plopped down on a timeline and sutured together with banter.

Also jarring is the shift of the soundtrack to modern pop music as the final scenes fade to credits that look like period pen-and-ink illustrations. Those remind me more of the Alan Parsons-produced synth soundtrack for Ladyhawke (1985), which came out shortly before Willow, or the medieval crowds singing rock lyrics in A Knight’s Tale (2001).

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

@16/crzydroid: I would be happy to see a version where the party is mostly Nelwyn with just a couple of Daikini. Maybe next season? Yeah, let’s have Willow and Mims go on a father-daughter quest against an evil Nelwyn sorceror played by Peter Dinklage.

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2 years ago

@@@@@ 19: The show was definitely darker from the beginning, and Episode 3 cemented that and kind of gelled it for me. The way Kit loses her easy swagger and realizes the world is a much more complex place she ever imagined, for instance. The way it showered us with Hubert’s delightful charm and then suddenly… well, you know.

I hope I’m right.

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Rando
2 years ago

Possible spoilers: They spoke with Val Kilmer because they really wanted him to be able to be in it, and apparently they brainstormed with him and just asked him how he thought he could do it, figured out a way they could, and so they wrote season 1 with the intent for him to be in it somehow. But, understandably, because of covid happening after that but before they started filming, he didn’t feel comfortable traveling. Now they are cryptically saying they are finding a way for him to be represented in spirt -That all comes dorectly from showrunners but I heard some speculation, take it with a grain of salt, that whatever that means will be the voice of his and Joanne Whalley’s actual son, Jack (very cool if it’s literally the actual child of Madmartigan and Sorsha doing his voice) I don’t know where that rumor is coming from though but the other stuff is in some regular articles. They also directly said no one is ruling out Val Kilmer being in a later season because they do really want to be able to include him

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Lurklen
2 years ago

Am I the only one who has fond memories of the sequel series written by Chris Claremont? I remember it being totally weird, but having some very striking imagery, and a few big twists that really made my young brain have to stop and process what I was reading. I haven’t yet checked out the series (or reread the books) I so enjoy the original, I kind of don’t want to taint it by being disappointed in either.

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Name
2 years ago

As it stands, we currently have a group with several women under the age of thirty, one young man, and several more men from their thirties into middle age. Not a great look in terms of suggesting who’s allowed to play “active” roles in stories.

 

Sorry, what? Older people are the ones who play “active” roles?

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J. King
2 years ago

@23 I remember reading those novels years ago, and thought they were decent. When I heard they were doing a Willow series, I figured they would either change whatever they wanted or ignore it altogether. Since most books are almost impossible to turn into a good tv series or movie, how much I care about the approach depends on how much I liked the books. (LoTR/Hobbit – make no changes! Rings of Power – just give me a good story)

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2 years ago

@25

Yeah I’ve heard some people rate them very harshly, but I remember them fondly. It’s hard to adapt, but I mean if one is going to do it, then I think one should try to grab what is most translatable to the new medium from the original. If only because “give me a good story” can mean totally different things to different people, but the original was at least good enough to give one cause to adapt it in the first place. If you’re going to do the Silmarillion, grab the most cinematic parts, or maybe do something else (Honestly, I would have rathered they do a totally original story in the setting if they couldn’t get the rights to the biggest parts of the work. Tell me a tale of the Blue wizards, maybe one of them is a woman, or there’s some great eastern queen we never got to hear about, if that’s a story one wants to tell). When I saw that one flash of the great battles against Morgoth, I got truly excited, and then was quite let down. 

As for Willow, I’m probably a little less invested, though some of the ideas from the books might be interesting to put to screen, there’s enough distance that as long as they are using what they’ve put together well, I’ll be happy. That said, it feels like many productions struggle with that. I blame the medium of streaming, I think there’s just too fast a turnaround for content, must be a terrible amount of pressure on the writers.

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2 years ago

@25 & others

I think the real reason people rate the Shadow War trilogy harshly (at least the reason why I disliked it & never even bothered reading the second or third book) is that they kill off Madmartigan & Sorsha & basically undo everything that happened in the movie in either the prologue or first chapter of the book. Everyone but Willow, Elora and the two brownies are just gone.

I understand making Elora the main character of the trilogy, after all Chris Claremont was known for writing strong female heroes during his decades long run on the Uncanny X-Men but to just basically throw away everything good that happened in the movie just pissed me (and others) off to no end.

I was never a huge Willow (the character) fan, my favorite character from the movie was of course Madmartigan, which makes a lot of sense considering I grew up and still am a Han Solo fanboy. So that move (of killing him and Sorsha off offscreen even, I think it’s just a sentence or two saying they’re dead now) never sat right with me.

As for the new show am I the only one that has a problem getting past the fact that even though the show is supossed to be set 20 years after the movie Sorsha & Willow both look 40 years older. Sorsha looks more like her kids’ grandmother than their mom. So even though I knew who Elora was right away (if they were trying to make her reveal a mystery, they didn’t do a very good job of it) I thought she looked too young (compared to Willow and Sorsha).

Also, I know the actress playing Elora is like 25 years old but she is very young looking. As a matter of fact, she looks younger than both Kit and Airk who should definitely be younger than her.

I was a huge fan of the movie and to this day whenever a baby gets handed to me I yell out “I stole da baby!”. Also my brother and I both had D&D characters while we were in high school that were halfling rogues named Franjen (my brother) and Ruul (me). Of course, our favorite insult to throw around was “Your motha was a lizard!”

 

ChristopherLBennett
2 years ago

@27/billiam: “am I the only one that has a problem getting past the fact that even though the show is supossed to be set 20 years after the movie Sorsha & Willow both look 40 years older.”

Ehh, I can buy it, since leadership ages you. Look at photos of just about any US president at the start and end of their term, and it’s like they age 20 years in just 4 years, because of the stress of all the responsibility and infighting and all. If they weren’t gray-haired when they took office, they were by the time they left. So it seems appropriate that Willow and Sorsha, the two leader figures, both appear to have aged disproportionately.

Now, Mims is just about the right age, since Dawn Downing was six when the movie came out — so maybe five when it was filmed — and Annabelle Davis is 25. Clearly Willow became a father much earlier in life than Warwick Davis did.

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2 years ago

After watching episode 4, I’m liking the series and the direction it is taking more and more. Not to mention the actors.

Yet I’m disliking the dialog more and more –and more. It is way too contemporary and simplistic. And it sucks at humor. Grayoncé? Seriously?