New Movie Review: Season of the Witch (2011)

SEASON OF THE WITCH gets the distinction of being the first film made/released in 2011 that I’ve seen and reviewed.  I’ve been reading about this one for a while now and considering I’ve been getting a ton of updates on it it was released with very little fanfare.  It’s always a warning sign when a big studio tries to slip one in past the goalie and release a film with little promotion.  Are they embarrassed by the final product?  Are they unsure of how to promote it?  Or do they just wanna push it out into theaters in what is considered a pretty slow time of year?  SEASON OF THE WITCH may not be the strongest film of the year but there’s some entertaining parts of it that you might enjoy.  BUT writer Bragi F. Schut takes the film, in the final act have you, in a pretty silly direction; so silly, in fact, that this is proving to be a very difficult review to write.

The movie stars Nicolas Cage as Behmen and Ron Perlman as Felson as two legendary fighters (a.k.a., they kill a lot of infidels) during the crusades.  During a siege on some stronghold they are told to slaughter everybody in the name of the lord because everyone there is an enemy of god.  Behmen and Felson soon realize they just killed a castle full of women and children.  As a result they desert the crusades and wander off.  Their journey takes them to a plague-infested “town” (a town here is simply a place that has a designated mud pit) where before you can say “welcome to Convenient Plot Point City,” they agree to transport a witch to another town where the monks can use the Book of Solomon (the last copy in existence, have you) to kill the witch and save the land from the plague.  Easy right?

Our stars, Cage & Perlman, disillusioned with the Church.

Along with our two stars is of course the accused witch, called simply “The Girl” (played by Claire Foy); a priest Debelzaq (Stephen Campbell Moore); Kay, an altar boy who wants to be a knight (Robert Sheehan); Hagamar, their guide, (Stephen Graham); and Eckhart, a soldier from the town they are leaving (Ulrich Thomsen).  As they set off on their journey we start getting hints that The Girl may just be a fall-girl and isn’t a witch at all.  The Girl even implies to Cage’s Behmen that Debelzaq, the clergyman, raped her.  So after getting a handful of clues and insinuations that she might not be a witch, writer Schut then turns around and starts dropping clues that she actually is a witch.  Unfortunately none of the hints and clues either way are subtle or clever but are pretty much in our face and have no room for interpretation.  This, in fact, is one of the problems I had with SEASON OF THE WITCH.  There’s no mystery whatsoever about what was going on.  From the pre-credit sequence we know for a fact that there’s a witch out there (a pretty vicious one at that); so all the little hints and innuendoes are pretty useless.

The Girl (Claire Foy) may not be what she seems.

The acting is decent across the board (although Kay looks as though he just stepped off the set of an amateur porn video; I was looking for an ugly couch and a potted plant!!).  How could it not be?  Granted Cage doesn’t always pick the best roles in the greatest films, but the man can certainly act.  And Ron Perlman is one of my personal favorite genre actors.  Even films that absolutely suck (I’m looking at you, THE LAST WINTER), he’s always fantastic.  We even get a very brief cameo from none other than Christopher Lee … a VERY brief cameo.  But whereas I didn’t have a problem with the acting, I did with the writing.  The dialogue often felt out of place, and there was too much forced humor; almost like they were trying to keep the atmosphere from getting too heavy.  But all the humor, mainly in the form of sarcastic little one-liners from Cage and Perlman, prevented the film from ever creating a dark and horrific tone; and that’s exactly what this film needed.

This friggin' book is the cause of a lot of trouble!!

It’s choices like adding all the levity into the dialogue and having that pre-credit sequence that completely ruins any mystery that makes me wonder why director Dominic Sena was chosen to helm this one.  Sena’s resume includes directing GONE IN SIXTY SECONDS and SWORDFISH, and the closest he’s gotten to the genre was with the crap-fest WHITEOUT in 2009.  And unfortunately Sena’s lack of genre experience shows like a brightly lit neon sign here; he just wasn’t the right choice to direct this film.

And look; this is a big budgeted Hollywood release and as it goes for any movie that’s a “period piece”, the sets and scenery are crucial to the film successfully transporting us back to whatever time period the film takes place in.  So why, please tell me, does it look like the set designer went to a SyFy Originals’ clearance sale for the sets?  We literally have TV movie-grade sets … very disappointing.

Christopher Lee's 3 minute cameo ... what a waste!!

Then we get to the ending … that goddamn ending.  I’m not gonna give away any spoilers here so I’m going to use an extended metaphor (at least I think it’s a metaphor … English was never my strong suit):  Let’s say you go to your favorite ice cream shop and want a waffle cone of vanilla bean ice cream.  You order and when you get it you find they gave you regular vanilla in a sugar cone.  In a sense there’s nothing wrong taste-wise with regular vanilla in a sugar cone, but it’s not what you were expecting.  Well everything leading up to the ending of SEASON OF THE WITCH suggests we were gonna get vanilla bean ice cream in a waffle cone, but instead we get regular vanilla in a sugar cone.  It’s almost a little insulting that Sena thinks the audience wouldn’t mind and be accepting of the “twist” ending.  Does it work?  Yeah sure; why not … it kinda fits into the film.  But you also kinda feel used by the filmmakers when it’s all said and done.  Instead of taking the film in the direction they led us to believe, they thought they were being clever by throwing in a twist; a twist, have you, that really did nothing to actually alter the ending at all.  If the ending was indeed about a witch it could have ended the exact same way as it did  It all just seemed so superfluous!!

The SyFy Channel called ... they want their shitty looking CGI wolf back!!

What’s that you ask?  The special f/x?  The CGI is just awful here.  We get some crappy looking CGI wolves and a really craptacular CGI final creature.  Believe me when I say they’re not worth mentioning.

Remember in the brilliant 1957 film THE SEVENTH SEAL when the knights are walking in the woods and encounter the “witch” caged up in the horse carriage?  Well when Cage and Perlman first set out on their journey I felt like I was seeing what happened to that girl after Bergman’s camera left her.  Unfortunately Sena’s camera picked her up and decided to go for the lowest common denominator and give us an ending we’ve seen a thousand times.  SEASON OF THE WITCH isn’t a horrible film and I’m sure it won’t even make my Worst of 2011 list, but it’s also not a great film.  Save your money; I’m sure it’ll be on the SyFy Channel in another month or two!!

My Summary:

Director:  Dominic Sena

Plot:  2 out of 5 stars

Gore:  2 out of 10 skulls

Zombies:  0 out of 5 brains (there were almost zombie-like creatures at the end)

Reviewed by Scott Shoyer

Comments
8 Responses to “New Movie Review: Season of the Witch (2011)”
  1. Deggsy says:

    Good review, Scott – I’ve been expecting you to do this one after you tweeted you were gonna go see it, and the timing is perfect, as I was planning on seeing it tonight…
    I think you hit the nail on the head when you said SyFy, as the first reviews coming out popped that word into my head as well. I wasl also not very impressed by the pre-production news that said “business and creative discussions led to avoiding too much violence or gore in the film so a broader audience could see it”. Thanks, guys, that’s much appreciated, my movie theatre experience isn’t the same without tweenies talking to each other in the rows behind me.
    Still, I wanted to cut this movie some slack. Not for Cage, who’s a fine actor in his own right but whom I do NOT see as a medieval knight, but because of Perlman, whom I can watch sit and eat breakfast, and because I’d read that the script promised a certain level of complexity and philosophical consideration regarding religion, faith, proof, etc.
    I should have realised that it wouldn’t end up like that when Sena came on board. As part of the studio’s attempt to reach a “broader audience”, they hire a director with the ability to hammer out any complexity or subtlety so the sub-literates can follow it and know what the movie is all about (In Gone in Sixty Seconds, it was all about car chases; in Swordfish, it was all about Halle Berry’s boobs, in Whiteout, it was… I’m not really sure what that was all about. I don’t think the fimmakers knew either).
    Well, I’ll watch it anyway, but only to support Perlman. he’s like a big ugly uncle who’s fun to be with 🙂

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    • Thanks Deggsy. This was originally supposed to be released around Sept 2010 & got bumped back to January 2011. You list some reasons why, & when the studios make decisions like that they send out the very clear message that the vision & plot if the film are secondary to the marketing of the film. If Cage & Perlman weren’t in SEASON OF THE WITCH I don’t think anyone would even see it.

      When will Hollywood realize that genre fans actually like their horror films to be … SCARY??? (god forbid!!!)

      SEASON had potential but due to a director who doesn’t “get” horror films & a writer who graduated from the M. Night School of Silly Twists, this one falls flat in it’s face!!

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  2. harmony0stars says:

    Thanks for the heads up on this one. I was considering seeing it if only because of Ron Perlman. As you said, he is one of the finest actors out there in terms of horror/action. Unfortunately, he seems to be the go to guy if your flick is going to be less than stellar right from the get-go, as if his consummate professionalism and skill can save an otherwise dog of a film from completely flopping. Before I read your review, the main drawback for me was Nicholas Cage… Beyond raising Arizona, I’ve never really cared for him in anything. For me, he’s very much an aging Keanu Reeves (a one-trick horse actor if ever there was one).

    Unless they’re way over the top (and therefore hilarious), I try to stay away from films with liberal doses of religious flavoring. Films which use Christianity as their foil tend to be truly awful, either hyped with dogma that makes Christianity out to be the go to religion if you’ve got issues or a morass of psychological, spiritual, and physical abusers who do horrible things for a god they don’t even believe in. Throw a witch into the mix, and it’s a recipe for disaster so far as I’m concerned.

    The only thing this film had going for it was Ron Perlman and from the previews I’ve seen, he’s playing second fiddle to Cage throughout the movie. So… I guess I’ll just wait till SyFy shows it. It’s not like they’ll cut out anything important to make it fit in the allotted time slot, right?

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    • Excellent points Candace … I absolutely love Ron Perlman but agree with you in that he seems to be the guy directors bring in to save their doomed project. And Nick Cage … aahhh Nicky boy. I must admit that I think he’s a tremendous actor that for some reason chooses the absolutely worst roles. GHOST RIDER??? Really??!? I’d really like to see him take on another “acting role” to see if he still has it or if his acting gift has faded after so many years of shitty, uninspiring roles!!

      I agree with ya on the use of Christianity in films. It makes me sick when these thinly veiled christian propaganda films get released. That’s one of the main reasons I hated LEGION & one of the reasons why I loved the 1st THE PROPHESY. There’s no doubt about it Candace, you’ll hate SEASON OF THE WITCH!!!

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  3. autumnforest says:

    Jesus, buddy! You are crazy! I wouldn’t go near that if it were in my path on my way to win the lottery. You are BRAVE! When it says Nicholas Cage, I just laugh and turn away. I’m glad you took this hit for us. I wasn’t about to do it.

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    • This film was definitely a mess Sharon. Cage was actually overshadowed by Perlman (love that guy) and he pretty much played his typical Cage character. This one had potential but was pissed away by poor writing and a director who doesn’t understand the horror genre.

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  4. Merlita says:

    Yeah, I saw the movie. Actually, I didn’t go see it because Nicholas Cage was in it. I saw it for the girl (Anna). There were a pretty good amount of flaws as far as the storyline went, it seemed like the times where the girl hinted that she was a witch were just random events. But, I did like the movie.

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    • I didn’t hate or like SEASON OF THE WITCH. It was one of those films that you forget about the second it’s over. Everything about it was “meh” and just totally forgettable.

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