| BROKEN SPELLS : Benjamin Christensen's 'The Witch' / 'Häxan' (1922) [4+/10] |
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| Friday, 04 May 2007 | |
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Though in many ways considerably
ahead of its time - wielding considerable influence both on surrealism, and on
decades of movies both highbrow and low - Christensen's The Witch doesn't live up to its exalted reputation. An ungainly
mix of dry documentary and stagey dramatisations - spiced up with the
occasional splurge of delirious excess - it purports to be a solemn lesson in
history and anthropology, investigating various facets of witchcraft over the
centuries. But so plodding is its execution that the film only very
intermittently flares into life - briefly taking off when writer/director/star
Christensen (who plays Satan in certain scenes) lets loose his imagination and envisages
frenzied, atmospherically bizarre occult rituals. Neil Young THE WITCH : [4+/10] : Häxan* : Sweden (Swe/Den) 1922 : Benjamin CHRISTENSEN : 104 mins (approx) seen at Hebden Bridge Picture House, Hebden Bridge (UK), 3rd May 2007 - public show (paid £8.00) - DVD projection (unsatisfactory) with live accompaniment by Geoff Smith on hammered dulcimers
* NB : this screening was advertised as Häxan : Witchcraft Through the Ages, which is the most widely used title for this film. The title Witchcraft Through the Ages, however, properly refers only to the truncated version released in 1967, running approximately 76 minutes and featuring a jazz score by Jean-Luc Ponty and narration by William S Burroughs. The Swedish word Häxan, meanwhile, is correctly pronounced "Hex-an", with the stress on the first syllable - and not as "Hack-saan."
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