Great, so now attackers can easily DoS your login system.
Besides, most password-strength analyses assume the attacker has full access to the file of encrypted passwords.
However, nobody in their right mind will store a password by simply storing the MD5 sum of the password. It will be salted and stored with a large number of rounds of a more secure hashing function which makes the crackers' job much harder.
You don't need to write "War and Peace". I will generate a perfectly secure, practically-uncrackable password for you right now.
/qh->0,uzLCb!51Wlcha4:a?@4Nmr:&^
Of course, you'll never be able to remember it. Which is why you store it in a password-keeper, encrypted with a strong passphrase (the only thing you do need to remember) and using a strong encryption algorithm like AES256.