


New England, 1630: William and Katherine lead a devout Christian life, homesteading on the edge of an impassible wilderness, with five children. When their newborn son mysteriously vanishes and their crops fail, the family begins to turn on one another. "The Witch" is a chilling portrait of a family unraveling within their own fears and anxieties, leaving them prey for an inescapable evil. (http Review: I heard about this movie and saw it had terrific reviews from many critics - I heard about this movie and saw it had terrific reviews from many critics. The movie doesn't disappoint. It really takes you back to that puritan era where people lived in dread of god and the devil. The atmosphere of the film is amazing. It really takes you back to that time and place. There are some memorable scenes in this film too. When the baby disappears when playing peek a boo and what happens to him after. When the young boy finds the witch's hovel. When he is sick on his bed. The scene in the field where the oldest girl Tomison turns the tables on her younger sister when she gets accused of being a witch. There are others. The whole crew of actors is really good. And of course you have black Phillip. Baaaaaa! Not only is this a horror story, but is also a metaphor for coming of sexual age and also rebelling against a very strict authority. So there are layers there. But if that stuff doesn't interest you, no biggie, because it works great as a very intense, dark, horror movie. The only mild complaint is the use of old English, not that you can't understand what they mean (I don't mean unintelligible old English) if you hear it, it is just sometimes you can't catch what they are saying. I watched the film twice and the second time I caught everything that was said. Fortunately you can set the film up with subtitles so even that is not an issue. This film is not for everyone. It's a thinking mans (or woman's) horror movie. It is measured, dark and creepy. If that time in history, or witches, or dark horror are your things, you will like this film. If not, you should pass. Review: Excellent, but not for everyone. - A very immersive horror movie in the classic sense. It's not full of sudden shocks or spectacular gore. What it does offer is steadily raising tension and a series of deeply disturbing scenes. Apparently they culled the story from various folk tales and evidence gathered in historic witch trials. It does seem very authentic, although if you have trouble understanding archaic English in vaguely British accents you may have some trouble getting through the dialogue. The plot revolves around a family of Puritans early in what I'm assuming is the Massachusetts Bay colony (they just refer to it as "the plantation") that gets banished and moves outside the fortress-like town. Except for the brief introductory scene much of the movie is centered on the family's small, struggling farmstead. Things begin to go awry when the infant son, Samuel, disappears without a trace. The film is equal parts Greek tragedy and psychological tension. For much of you're not even sure if there really is anything supernatural going on or these people are just going crazy due to their isolation and hardships. This is not a movie for everyone. It stays very true to its source material and if you're familiar with it AND you like deeply disturbing horror movies you will absolutely love this film. You will not like it if you're looking for dazzling creature effects, over the top gore, or a campy horror movie. Even when the characters joke with one another there's this constant, gnawing fear underlying everything. The pacing may seem slow if you're used to mainstream horrors or thrillers, and while it's not a gore-fest there are a couple of very disturbing images that are shown (albeit briefly or or in the relative background).




| ASIN | B01D2KFSS8 |
| Actors | Anya Taylor-Joy, Julian Richings, Kate Dickie, Ralph Ineson |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,489 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #49 in Horror (Movies & TV) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (1,493) |
| Director | Robert Eggers |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 47607 |
| MPAA rating | R (Restricted) |
| Media Format | DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Producers | Daniel Bekerman, Jay Van Hoy, Jodi Redmond, Lars Knudsen, Rodrigo Teixeira |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.01 ounces |
| Release date | May 17, 2016 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 32 minutes |
| Studio | Liosngate Pictures Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English, Spanish |
P**S
I heard about this movie and saw it had terrific reviews from many critics
I heard about this movie and saw it had terrific reviews from many critics. The movie doesn't disappoint. It really takes you back to that puritan era where people lived in dread of god and the devil. The atmosphere of the film is amazing. It really takes you back to that time and place. There are some memorable scenes in this film too. When the baby disappears when playing peek a boo and what happens to him after. When the young boy finds the witch's hovel. When he is sick on his bed. The scene in the field where the oldest girl Tomison turns the tables on her younger sister when she gets accused of being a witch. There are others. The whole crew of actors is really good. And of course you have black Phillip. Baaaaaa! Not only is this a horror story, but is also a metaphor for coming of sexual age and also rebelling against a very strict authority. So there are layers there. But if that stuff doesn't interest you, no biggie, because it works great as a very intense, dark, horror movie. The only mild complaint is the use of old English, not that you can't understand what they mean (I don't mean unintelligible old English) if you hear it, it is just sometimes you can't catch what they are saying. I watched the film twice and the second time I caught everything that was said. Fortunately you can set the film up with subtitles so even that is not an issue. This film is not for everyone. It's a thinking mans (or woman's) horror movie. It is measured, dark and creepy. If that time in history, or witches, or dark horror are your things, you will like this film. If not, you should pass.
A**R
Excellent, but not for everyone.
A very immersive horror movie in the classic sense. It's not full of sudden shocks or spectacular gore. What it does offer is steadily raising tension and a series of deeply disturbing scenes. Apparently they culled the story from various folk tales and evidence gathered in historic witch trials. It does seem very authentic, although if you have trouble understanding archaic English in vaguely British accents you may have some trouble getting through the dialogue. The plot revolves around a family of Puritans early in what I'm assuming is the Massachusetts Bay colony (they just refer to it as "the plantation") that gets banished and moves outside the fortress-like town. Except for the brief introductory scene much of the movie is centered on the family's small, struggling farmstead. Things begin to go awry when the infant son, Samuel, disappears without a trace. The film is equal parts Greek tragedy and psychological tension. For much of you're not even sure if there really is anything supernatural going on or these people are just going crazy due to their isolation and hardships. This is not a movie for everyone. It stays very true to its source material and if you're familiar with it AND you like deeply disturbing horror movies you will absolutely love this film. You will not like it if you're looking for dazzling creature effects, over the top gore, or a campy horror movie. Even when the characters joke with one another there's this constant, gnawing fear underlying everything. The pacing may seem slow if you're used to mainstream horrors or thrillers, and while it's not a gore-fest there are a couple of very disturbing images that are shown (albeit briefly or or in the relative background).
P**Y
Good if you're interest lies in the historical hysteria of the witch hunts of the 1600s
this is a good "historical" type of witch movie with a surprise ending. Scenes are authentic as to the lifestyle of the time. Centers on the fears and superstitions of the townspeople. Good movie
B**R
Great movie
It was very well done but very unsettling. This is the kind of movie I would probably watch on Halloween. It stays with you and I don't know if that is a positive thing. They speak in old English (thee and thou and so on)
D**A
More like the terrifying and deadly breakdown of a dysfunctional fanatical ...
The first time I saw this film,I regarded it at face value : A period piece about a Puritan family being victimized by a woodland witch. I found it both disturbing and horrifying,and couldn't help but feel that I had missed something in the story. So I watched it a few more times,very carefully.It was then that I realized what was actually going on in this film and the incredible genius of the film makers. While this is truly a frightening horror story, I wouldn't classify it as being a supernatural one. More like the terrifying and deadly breakdown of a dysfunctional fanatical Puritan family ; suffering from isolation,starvation, religious guilt,madness and hallucinations brought on by the ingestion of mold infected grain plants. Obvious clues are shown throughout the film,if you watch closely enough. The youngest child,Samuel ,who is allegedly taken away, from right under his sister Thomasin's nose,as she plays peek-a-boo with him. While Samuel is an infant,he is not a newborn.He laughs,smiles,and reacts to people he knows.Had he really been whisked away in a matter of seconds,by a stranger,I believe he would have been screaming his head off. Rather we see someone in a long reddish/wine colored cape/wrap, scurrying through the woods as they hold him. He is almost cooing,and doesn't seem upset at all. Minutes before he was taken,the children's mother;hands him to Thomasin. Samuel is wrapped in a brownish sort of blanket. Around the brownish blanket,is a very long,reddish /wine colored cape?The knife used to kill Samuel resembles one used at various times throughout the film by family members,several of whom carry a knife hanging from their belts on their person.Caleb,the oldest son,goes missing the woods,after sneaking off in the night with his older sister Thomasin. Upon returning,he is nude and feverish.His temple is cut to bleed him,with a knife that strangely resembles the one used on Samuel. Caleb is also hallucinating.We are led to believe,in a very dreamlike previous scene; that he was bewitched and or seduced,by a witch in the woods.This witch was wearing a long reddish/wine colored cape. Caleb is seen gazing almost lustfully at his older sister's bosom,in a few scenes prior to his going missing. Caleb coughs up blood and what appears to be a crabapple,just before he dies. Crabapples,can be toxic,in large quantities. The boy was starving ,if he found a tree,he most certainly would have eaten more than one.Thomasin is locked in the barn with her two younger siblings,a set of twins,after they accuse her of being a witch.The following morning the barn is ripped apart,the twins gone and the barn animals dead and bloody.Thomasin has blood on her hands,and is accused by her mother who has blood stains on the front of her nightgown,of killing the twins .The father was killed a few moments earlier after being attacked by the family's unruly male goat Black Philip.Black Philip is believed to be the devil in disguise and has conversations with members of the family. More than likely he is just a goat out of control,feeling the hallucinogenic effects from eating the same rotted moldy crops as the family.We see in several scenes the crops are blighted and rotten,yet they are all eating them anyway.Their behavior quickly descends into a sort of Puritanical witch hunting madness,in which they see evil in everything from the farm animals to each other.They are all sick,and their illness is magnified by their outrageous religious beliefs.Thomasin kills her mother,in self defense ,with what looks to be that same knife,used on both Sam,and Caleb.No I don't think Thomasin was a witch,and I don't think any of them were bewitched.The witch was an excuse,for what the parents and family members were doing to each other. I believe the last scene was a complete hallucination on Thomasin's part.She was really the most rational of all her family members,but by that point her mind had snapped,especially after what she had witnessed in the barn the night before. She had seen who really killed twins.And it was no witch.
F**.
Entertaining.
A little slow but very interesting. Love Anya Taylor Joy. Good movie.
R**Y
Von dem Horrorfilm "The VVitch - A New England Folktale" des Regisseurs Robert Eggers kann ein Fan von subtilen Horrorgeschichten nur noch begeistert sein. Diese mit Mystery angereicherte Geschichte spielt in der Zeit der Pilgerväter und erinnert sofort an Nicholas Hynters Filmdrama "Hexenjagd" mit Winona Ryder, Joan Allen und Daniel Day Lewis, das die Ereignisse im Jahre 1692 in Salem, einer damals streng puritanischen Gemeinde im US-Staat Massachuetts aufgriff. Diese Hexenprozesse fanden damals in dieser streng puritanischen Gemeinde tatsächlich statt. In ihrem Verlauf wurden 20 Beschuldigte hingerichtet, 55 Menschen unter Folter zu Falschaussagen gebracht, 150 Verdächtigte inhaftiert und weitere 200 Menschen der Hexerei beschuldigt. Die Anschuldigungen dehnten sich innerhalb weniger Monate auf viele andere amerikanische Gemeinden aus. Eggers Film spielt kurz vor dieser Zeit um 1630. Zehn Jahre nachdem die Mayflower mit ersten Siedlern aus England an Bord im amerikanischen Plymouth anlegte. Zu diesen ersten Immigranten zählt auch die Familie des streng religiösen William (Ralph Ineson). Gemeinsam mit seiner Frau Katherine (Kate Dickie) erziehen sie ihre Kinder Thomasin (Anya Taylor Joy), Caleb (Harvey Scrimshaw) und die kleinen Zwillinge Mercy (Ellie Grainger) und Jonas (Lucas Dawson) sehr streng nach den Geboten Gottes und der heiligen Schrift. Vor kurzem haben die vier Kinder noch ein kleines Geschwisterchen Samuel bekommen. Das Leben als Neubürger in einer Plantage erweist sich aber für den wenig angepassten Vater William als sehr schwierig. Daher nimmt der Zuschauer in der ersten Szene an einem Prozess der Kirchenältesten gegen ihn tiel, mit dem Ergebnis, dass er und seine Familie aus der Gemeinde ausgestoßen werden. Die Familie verlässt das Dorf und nach einer kurzen Reise von einigen Tagen finden sie am Rande eines großen Waldes ein neues, scheinbar ruhiges Zuhause. Dort wollen sie sich eine Existenz aufbauen. Das Leben ausserhalb der Zivilisation bedeutet aber viel Arbeit und vor allem viel Gebet, damit dieses Vorhaben des Existenzaufbaus auch gelingen mag. Als der Winter naht werden die Pflanzen, die William gesät hat, von einer Krankheit befallen. Da der Mais so nicht eßbar ist, tauscht William heimlich den geliebten Silberbecher seiner Frau gegen Tierfallen ein. Die platziert er im nahen Wald, um dort erfolgreich Wild zu töten. Dann verschwindet der kleine Samuel wie von Geisterhand vor den Augen der ältesten Tochter Thomasin, die auf ihn aufpassen sollte. Dieses Verschwindet verändert die gesamte Familie. Die Mutter weint nur noch und betet, der Vater sieht nur die Jagd im Vordergrund und geht mit seinem Ältesten in den Wald zur Jagd, was er der Frau verheimlicht. Doch in den Fallen ist kein Tier. Aber sie entdecken auf dem Heimweg plötzlich einen Hasen, den der Vater schießen will. Doch auch dies misslingt - stattdessen verletzt sich der Vater durch den Schuß leicht am Gesicht. Während Mercy und Jonas vermehrt mit dem wilden Ziegenbock "Schwarzer Philipp" spielen, sieht der Zuschauer eine Szene im Wald. Eine dort lebende Hexe schmiert sich in der Nacht mit Blut ein. Und damit verstärkt sich auch der Konflikt innerhalb der Familie. Während William dies für eine Prüfung Gottes hält, denkt Katherine zunehmend an einen Fluch. Und dabei lässt sie ihren Kummer immer mehr an Thomasin aus... Wer ein Faible für düstere Märchen mag, der kommt bei diesem großartigen Horrorbeitrag voll auf seine Kosten. Am Anfang erinnerte mich der Film sogar an den hervorragenden Märchenfilm "Das Märchen der Märchen" von Matteo Garrone, der für mich zu den absoluten Highlights dieses Filmjahres zählt, aber sehr bald verwandelt sich diese mystische, geheimnisvolle Stimmung immer mehr in einen fiesen Alptraum. Dies geschieht aber alles äusserst subtil und glaubwürdig, die Atmosphäre bleibt stets auf dem höchsten Level erhalten. Grandiose Kameraarbeit von Jarin Blaschke, meines Erachtens ein potentieller Oscar-Kandidat. Wie auch die junge Anya Taylor-Joy als Thomasin. Aber auch Ralph Ineson, Kate Dickie und Harvey Scimshaw liefern sehr gute Darstellungen ab. Umso erstaunlicher, dass "The VVitch" Eggers Regiedebüt ist. Dies hat er sorgfältig geplant, denn er hat mit Historikern zusammengearbeitet um die Geschichte sehr authentisch darzustellen. Er las Prozessakten, zeitgenössischen Überlieferungen - sogar landwirtschaftliche Abhandlungen. Ein Perfektionsbestreben, dass der Cineast ja nur von wenigen Ausnahmeregisseuren wie Luchino Visconti gewohnt war. Zu diesen Elementen ließ er sich aber auch von den Gedanken in seiner kindheit inspieren. So lässt sich das Märchenhafte dieser Geschichte ableiten. Eggert hat als Kind geglaubt, dass die Wälder hinter seinem Elternhaus von Geistern, Hexen und Dämonen bewohnt sind. Neben den menschlichen Darstellern sind im Film mehrere Tiere, darunter ein Hund, ein Pferd, Ziegen, Hasen und ein Rabe zu sehen. Und ja, der Teufel hat viele Gesichter. Ein perfekter Grusler für Halloween und einer der besten Filme des Jahres.
A**E
Film à thème sur la foi en dieu d’une famille et la sorcellerie ,poignant
M**O
Para mi una obra de arte en cuanto a la fotografía y el guion, los actores hacen un papel muy muy bueno y creo que no se puede pedir mas, no esperéis la tipica pelicula de terror, esta pelicula te genera un suspense en el cuerpo nunca visto. Tiene castellano, imporante dato.
A**S
Excelente producto, llegó en buen estado.
J**N
In 1630 William, a God-fearing Puritan father, along with his wife and children are banished from a New England settlement and travel to the edge of a gray and foreboding forest where they build a farm. One day their budding adolescent daughter, Thomasin, is tending to her new baby brother when suddenly, while playing a game of peek-a-boo near the forest, the baby mysteriously vanishes. Later her oldest brother Caleb disappears as well while in the woods with Thomasin. When Caleb wanders back naked he is not quite the same and the family becomes unhinged. Thomasin's young twin brother and sister accuse her of being a witch. She in turn accuses them of conversing with the family billy goat, Black Phillip. Enraged the father boards all three in the stable. Things only get worse. The directing, script, cinematography, costumes, sets, and acting are all of high quality. The music helps create a mood of darkness and despair. The pace is slow, deliberate, and sometimes dull. The archaic English can prove difficult but I watched the DVD with subtitles! Director/writer Robert Eggers takes his story serious, trying to bring to life a 17th century vision of a world that includes witches. Warning: If you are looking for a scary movie, this will disappoint. It is more about atmosphere. In this regard it is like "It Follows."
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