Back to Blog
Halloween season of the witch5/8/2023 ![]() Tom Atkins and Garn Stephens (who played Marge Guttman) were husband and wife at the time. ![]() The original Halloween film can be seen twice playing on two TVs during the film. The tagline "The night nobody comes home" is a play on the original Halloween movie's tagline, "The night HE came home." After this movie underperformed at the box office, the film-makers decided to bring Michael back to life for future sequels. Trivia ( Provided by IMDB and Halloween: 25 Years of Terror):Īfter Michael Myers died at the end of Halloween II, the plan by John Carpenter was to make a new "Halloween" movie each year, each telling a different Halloween-related story. Doctor Daniel Challis seeks to uncover a plot by Silver Shamrock owner Conal Cochran. Synopsis: Kids all over America want Silver Shamrock masks for Halloween. This week we continue to discuss the series with the third, unique entry - Halloween III - Season of The Witch (1982) When a terrified toy salesman is mysteriously attacked and brought to the hospital, babbling and clutching the years most popular Halloween costume, an eerie. Last week we started our Halloween Series discussion. Producer John Carpenter (Halloween, The Thing) presents the third chilling installment in the shocking Halloween collection. Sure, it's got Ron Perlman head-butting a demon, but is that enough? Afraid not.Welcome back to our weekly slasher horror movie discussion. ![]() Season of the Witch could have been interesting, but it comes off as a bland blockbuster with very little to go for it. they look like cheaper versions of Doctor Who's Weeping Angels, minus the scares. ![]() As for the witches (yes, they do appear in a few scenes), well. A cameo by Christopher Lee - who actually looks more like Max von Sydow - livens things up despite its brevity (even Tim Burton has given him more screen time), and the joy of seeing him and Perlman - lovable as always - in the same movie could make up for the rest if the second half of the picture wasn't so shoddy. The acting is a similar mixed bag: Cage does his usual generic blockbuster shtick, which jars considerably with the gravitas coming from Thomsen and, to a lesser extent, Sheehan, both of whom are taking the film far more seriously than required. Setting aside factual inaccuracies, namely the fact that the Crusades, witch hunts and black plague didn't occur simultaneously (and what's with Cage's sudden bout of modern cursing in a Medieval setting?), the uneven tone kicks in after a moderately promising first half, leaving room for basic plotting that culminates in a ghastly genre switch and a most annoying "twist". The storyline certainly had enough spark to produce an interesting movie, but Sena messes with the final product by not knowing what to aim for: depending on the section, Season of the Witch is a historical drama, a thriller with hints of the supernatural or, at worst, a clumsy meld of horror and fantasy (then again, what should we expect from a film that shares its title with the third Halloween flick?). Assisted by a loyal knight (Ulrich Thomsen) and an eager youngster (Robert Sheehan), they begin a perilous journey that will test their faith in every possible way. They discover a plague-ridden landscape where witch hunts are an everyday routine, and eventually make it to a village where they encounter a priest (Stephen Campbell Moore) who needs help taking a potential witch (Claire Foy) to a monastery, where she will face trial. This time, Cage doesn't play a magician, but a crusader who, having witnessed too much bloodshed, runs off to Europe with his fellow soldier and best friend (Ron Perlman). While the latter was a by-numbers Disney effort (plenty of effects, a general lack of heart), Sena's latest work manages to also be quite a bit boring and occasionally ludicrous. A familiar combination, since Dominic Sena's Season of the Witch hits theaters only a few months after The Sorcerer's Apprentice (whose producer Jerry Bruckheimer, in the oddest of coincidences, worked with both star and director on Gone in 60 Seconds, eleven years back).
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |