Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

14 May 2024

Häxan

 Häxan is a 1922 (105 minutes) Swedish silent film written, directed and starring Benjamin Christensen. It was re-released and edited for the western market as Witchcraft Through the Ages (1968, 74 minutes).  The pseudo-documentary style traces the history of witchcraft from the Middle Ages to the 20th century.  The movie is based on Malleus Maleficarum (Hammer of Witches) written by German Catholic clergyman Heinrich Kramer that was published in the late 1400s.  The author blamed women for the troubles of the world and promoted torture and death as a means to get confessions and finally death as the only way to remove witchcraft from the planet.  Despite criticism by top leaders in the church, it was nonetheless popular among the normal “Joes.”  (get my drift?)


Special effects included reverse motion, makeup, color tinting and others.  Even with intertitles, it was not until the English subtitles were added that this title reached a global audience.

You need to remember that witches were a constant threat to humanity during the period and translated in the horrific events of the Salem Witch Trials in America in 1692.  While Salem and Häxan have similarities, the interest to the Fright Tourist is the theme of witches.  For the fright tourist a basic understanding of the evil centered on witches is essential.  For this reason, this film is popular in film studies University classes, since it would likely be banned in primary schools found in Red States.

In Häxan the film is broken down into several parts or chapters.  The first is based on early paintings and wood carvings illustrating demons and witches and the role of hell within our finite Earth.  Next are a series of short vignettes that illustrated, with the help of the intertitles, witchcraft supporting the work of the devil.

This prompted the formation of witch hunters in the Middle Ages, where any unusual death or malady could be attributed to a woman, typically the wife.  A subsequent torture would cause the woman to confess, only to be burned at a stake.  Damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

The more modern parts of the story relate the behavior of witches as a psychological disorder that we would not find in the current edition of the DSM.

We must be reminded that witches are found in every culture in the world. While the reader is most familiar with America’s examples, including Charmed (US TV 1998-2006) and Buffy the Vampire Slayer (US TV 1997-2003) where witches are shown to be some of the beautiful people, this is certainly unlike Häxan’s characters.  Elsewhere, the witches of Europe have been frequently displayed in film and include the Witchfinder story line in the 1960s and 70s that catered to the violence loving audience.  See Witchfinder General (1968) with Vincent Price for one of the “softer” rated themes.

Witch movies are still found around the globe albeit with different names like Aswang, Djambe, Bruja, Majo, Phu Thuy and more.  Häxan is in public domain so is readily available for viewing on the web.  The definitive source is available since 2019, the Criterion Collection released the 2016 digital restoration exclusively on Blu-ray in the US.




07 July 2021

A Zero in Damascus

 Slept late (8:00 am), wrote 10 post cards to friends.  Cooked dinner to save money.

"It's hot today."

So to talk briefly about money.

I figure it cost me $2,000 to hike 2,000 mile or a dollar a mile.  This of course is 1974/75 dollars but I need to report it was also my gear!  $100 for my pack, same for my sleeping bag.  $11 for my SVEA 123 stove and so on.  My 35 mm camera (Olympus 35RC) was a gift from my dad.  I shot 35mm slides and got prepaid mailers to send along the trail and had the slides sent home. This is important since I probably only shot 300 slides along the trip not the gazillion folks do today.

Here is an example of a slide that I scanned recently showing the border.


Used a timer of course to get the "selfy."


31 March 2021

Guru the Mad Monk

 Did you catch this title on Turner Classic Movies this month?  Seems to be off the network right now, but to offer a film from Andy Milligan is a start toward "classic" in my book.

For another film search for:




Many titles are in public domain, so should be easy to find.

10 March 2017

Robert Osborne RIP (May 3, 1932 – March 5, 2017)

This name may not ring a bell for many of you, but since the start of Turner Classic Movies, the cable commercial free channel, his wisdom on movie and everything about the art form was highly cherished.  In reading his obits this past week I was surprised about his small acting role in the pilot of Beverly Hillbillies, a class comedy from a a past era.  Further it was neat to read that Lucille Ball encourage Mr. Osborne that Hollywood needed more writers that actors.  How true is that!

If you get a chance to watch TCM for the classic films, I think you will be pleased.  It is only a $5 add on for those of you who stream TV, or $10 for those still depending on cable.

24 January 2017

Singin' in the Rain

Saw this classic on the big screen last week as part of a TCM initiative to bring films to audiences at movie theaters.  You can't beat the BIG screen.



At first I wondered if the film was wide screen but according to the ad, "This film will be shown in the same aspect ratio as when it was originally released in cinemas."  There seems to be some debate on the subject though.

In any case, it was fun.