Although
Wizards received a
limited release, it was very successful in the theaters that showed it, and developed a worldwide audience.
Review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 62%, based on 29 reviews with an average rating of 5.5/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Its central metaphor is a bit too on the nose, but
Wizards is an otherwise psychedelic, freaky trip into an alternate version of our world."
A. H. Weiler of
The New York Times writes that the film "evolves, at best, as only a mildly interesting mixture of clashing
polemics and shoot-'em-up melodrama" that "merely restates the already too obvious, dire results of nuclear war and man's inhumanity to man." Arthur D. Murphy of
Variety panned the film as "a confusing melange of melodrama, allegory and limp polemic. The animation technique is excellent in a professional sense, but neither story nor music ever really gets interesting."
Gene Siskel gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and wrote that "Ralph Bakshi's
Wizards, although good-looking, isn't magical enough. Although it's a futuristic fairy-tale, it frequently interrupts its narrative with contemporary jokes. The jokes remind us we're watching a movie while calling into question the sincerity of the film itself."
Charles Champlin of the
Los Angeles Times was generally positive, writing: "Whatever else it is, 'Wizards' is a feast for the eyes, a nonstop succession of imaginings and imageries that are beautiful, startling funny, powerfully ominous, classically cartoonish, visions of heaven and hellfire ... It is hypnotically interesting for those who are addicted to animation but hardly less so to those who are plenty satisfied with
Tom and Jerry." Gary Arnold of
The Washington Post found the film a "dim animated novelty" that was "conspicuously lacking in narrative momentum. Even when the graphics and draughtsmanship seem clever, they embellish the most negligible of scenarios." Richard Combs of
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "What emerges from this mish-mash of material is a predictable confusion of sentiment and cynicism: Bakshi seems uncertain whether to try for the full other-worldly magic of Tolkien or to treat the whole thing as camp (the tone of the flower-child fairy-tale narrator strongly suggests the latter)."
Ken Whitman's company Whit Publications published the tabletop role-playing game ''
Ralph Bakshi's Wizards'' in 1992. 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment responded to an online petition created by Animation on DVD.com and written by Keith Finch demanding the film's release on DVD. The disc, released on May 25, 2004, featured an
audio commentary track by Bakshi and the interview segment
Ralph Bakshi: The Wizard of Animation. Bakshi has stated that
Wizards was always intended as a trilogy. One of the sequels was pitched to Fox, who did not greenlight the project. The disc includes the special features from the DVD, along with a 24-page book including rare artwork from the film and an introduction from Bakshi. == Possible sequel ==