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User Reviews for: The Witches

AndrewBloom
CONTAINS SPOILERS6/10  3 years ago
[5.8/10] I don’t like to play the “Who is this for?” card. It can stack the deck against films that do something unique or otherwise out of the ordinary. There’s room for films that don’t fit into traditional boxes, even if the specific audience they’re after isn’t immediately clear.

But after watching *The Witches*, a film that made enough of an impression on a certain generation to become a Halloween cult classic, I can’t help wondering, well, why?

Because this movie seems weirdly intense and vaguely-boundary pushing for something meant only for little kids. The sequences where the witches transform into their normal guise is legitimately frightening. There’s legitimate pathos in the untimely death of the protagonist’s parents. The Grand High Witch’s routine is weirdly (if mesmerizingly) sexual much of the time. The heavy hints that the hotel manager is schtupping one of the maids, and young Bruno’s mom is angry at his dad for flirting with Eva Ernst seem odd and miscalibrated for a family film, and not in a clever, slipping it under the radar sort of way. There’s so many things here which seem targeted at an older audience, or at least meant for teenagers.

And yet, this whole movie is too dumb and cheesy to appeal to anyone over the age of nine. Luke, our pint-sized protagonist, is just insufferable. The wacky slapstick sequences of mice running around the hotel could only please someone who remembers what it’s like to be in diapers. The over-the-top acting and constant shrieks and mugging and other mishegoss reflect the kind of broad comedy meant to appeal to underdeveloped minds.

So *The Witches* plays like a cinematic contradiction: a dopey festival of the idiotic to plop a glassy-eyed moppet in front of for an hour or so, while also having the sort of scares and sexual content that would be bizarre to include in a film for that set. Clearly people still enjoy this movie, and have fond memories from when they were a kid, so I’m missing something, but it’s hard to imagine what.

Maybe it’s just Angelica Huston as the queen bee of the vampiric set. She is electric in the role. Huston is one of the few performers in the movie who understands the assignment. She chews the scenery, sure. But she’s also arch, magnetic, and one of the few people in *The Witches* who seems to be having a good time. Her biting retorts to praise or questioning by her flock, her sly annoyed dismissals of humans who get in her way, and her cackling malevolence when unveiling her plans all give her a memorable distinctiveness that would justify any young viewer’s fond remembrances.

In the same way, the prosthetics and other depictions of monstrous transformation here are the only other elements worth the price of admission. Again, the look of the Grand High Witch is grotesque, but in a fantastic way. The bulging nose, the gnarled skin, the overextended fingers and claws all send shivers down your spine. It’s a fantastic melding with Huston’s (or her stand-in’s) great physical performance, as the combination of her preening movements and the horrid exterior create something memorable.

But all the special effects in the film’s transformative sequences catch the eye. Belches of green smoke, half-mice people squirming and gnawing at their plates, even some budding CGI showing a kid in an interstitial state reveal the creativity and inventiveness that remained in Jim Henson Productions. Even where the story and tone fall apart, as a technical showcase and visual marvel, *The Witches* leaves its mark.

Good lord, though, at some point I realized I was rooting for the witches. Luke is *so damn annoying*. He says the word “grandma” roughly fifty times in the movie, with the exact same intonations. His line-reads are abominable, which is an indictment of the director who worked with the young talent, not the kid himself.

But more to the point, there’s never much of a reason to root for Luke. Sure, he loses his parents early in the film, but he never seems affected by it in any way whatsoever, so you sympathize more with his grandmother than him. He doesn’t do anything of note before his mouse transformation, just being whisked around by his grandma and occasionally finding himself in the wrong place at the wrong time. And even when he tries to play the hero rodentia, the plans are so random and cartoony that, despite the fate of children throughout England being theoretically at stake, it never feels like there’s much in the way of tension, excitement, or courage. Luke’s just the same happy go lucky kid whether he’s just learned his parents or dead or he thinks he’s going to be trapped as a mouse for the rest of his life.

All that’s left otherwise is the various misadventures of the visitors at the hotel. Rowan Atkinson is a generic overwhelmed manager, half-antagonist, half-comic foil, with barely a laugh to be had. Grandma tells the spookiest story in the whole movie in the first ten minutes, but spends most of the rest of the picture aimlessly tossing her grandson into danger and trying futilely to convince some acquaintances that their son has turned into a mouse. The other side kicks and pratfallers and cardboard cut-out characters are all too over-the-top to be worth a damn.

Too much of this is just dumb, in a way that might work if you’re still in elementary school, but which provokes eyerolls for anyone old enough to do multiplication. Which again begs the question, why throw in all this strangely adult stuff if that’s the tone and style of your film?

But maybe that’s the answer. Maybe if you excised Angelica Huston’s brilliant, vibratory performance and the creepshow achievements of the effects team, you’d be left with a forgettable wacky jaunt for babies. And yet those arguably inappropriate elements give *The Witches* a certain sense of danger, something weirder and more memorable than the average kids film for their out-of-place inclusion. I’m still not sure who this movie is for, but maybe it’s meant to be shown to those tykes young enough to appreciate its, shall we say, simple presentation, but still able to be freaked out, confused, or provoked by the film’s more...avant garde elements.
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MasterCreate97
CONTAINS SPOILERS7/10  5 years ago
Honesty, i'm kinda torn on how I feel about the film adaptation of the classic Roald Dahl Book "The Witches". On the one hand, The makeup for the witches especially the Grand High Witch oozes with creepiness even to this very day. The combination of real trained mice and puppetry mice work very well together. The actress who plays the Grand High Witch Herself is downright perfect casting and it's not shy to show kids some very intense and scary imagery which is very welcomed.

Although it got a lot of things from the book right, I just can't help but sadly say that the book.....is just better. The book had more character and charm. It also had a very ballsy but also satisfying ending where [spoiler] Luke still remains a mouse. This means unfortunately he'll have a very short amount of time to live, but he's happy in his new form and since his grandma will also have a short time to live they'll still be together even until the very end. The Movie goes the opposite direction and changes Luke back into a human by the end of the movie which I honestly wouldn't mind myself if it weren't for it's sappy execution and overtone happiness.[/spoiler]

Even Roald Dahl himself was so mad at the movie's ending that he personally went to several local movie theaters during it's release and begged people not to see the movie. sure, that's a bit excessive but In my opinion, I wouldn't blame him.


While I do admit that I myself am also not a fond of how the film adaptation of "The Witches" ends, I did also find a lot of things that were highly enjoyable. I would highly recommend reading the book more than watching the movie but as far as children's book adaptations go, this one is definitely one of the better ones.
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CinemaSerf
/10  one year ago
Young "Luke" (an enthusiastic Jasen Fisher) lives with his grandmother "Helga" (May Zetterling) after being mysteriously orphaned. His grandmother has made him worldly wise to the ways of witches, and so he is alert to the antics of "Eva" (Angelica Huston) when he and his ever-hungry new friend "Bruno" (Charlie Potter) meet in a seaside hotel. Overhearing her evil grand design as she addresses a convention of hags and crones, both he and his friend are turned into white mice - but can he get back to his grandmother and warn her before all the children in the world are gone? It's quite a quickly paced and fun adventure this, with plenty of escapades as the boys/mice have to steal the potion and thwart the witches. Jim Henson has provided some suitably grizzly effects and the supporting cast - especially the rather supercilious Bill Paterson as the father of "Bruno" help keep the film flow effortlessly for ninety minutes before an ending that might put you off pea soup for quite a long a while. It has dated a little, but is still an enjoyable piece of family cinema that I did quite enjoy.
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Davy Endgame X
7/10  one year ago
7/10
No wonder this fabulous movie has become
a British cult classic.
It's so naughty and dark
and never could be recreated in such a way today,
and that makes me sad for the times we live in.
The pc,woke,sjw
cancel culture snowflake era.

Just watch
The 2020 retelling
of this movie if you
Need anymore proof.
(No guts no glory).

I was brought up
on the Witches book
at school and
The Demon Headmaster,
another classic.
I love this movie
the original
The Witches
And enjoy it many
Times now as an adult
Especially as I own it
on blu ray.
Angelica kills it she is
Perfect in the role,
Super charismatic
and so dark but funny
With it, I see why she
Landed the role as
Morticia in
The Adams Family.
Rowan does a great
Job but when does he not
And the cigar smoking
Grandmother
Is amazing.
The movie is so
Unique, one such as
Will never see the likes
Of again, watching
as an adult now I see
Just actually how Terrifying this movie is
And for me that's it's charm, I love stuff that
Wouldn't be allowed today,
And that is what makes this all year round watchable entertaining movie even more
Appealing.
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