Usually when a film is described as a ‘slow burn’ the idea
is that you have to sit through an hour of laborious somewhat tedious
storytelling or protracted character development before you get to the moments
that are compelling. This is not the case with the GRETEL AND HANSEL (2020) at
all. Although the movie does rest squarely on the shoulders of two fantastic
performances this small-scale retelling of the fairy tale is mesmerizing and its
ability to impart loads of information through its imagery is phenomenal. Certainly,
it IS a slow burn as the first hour or so of the film slowly, carefully gives
us, through mood and atmosphere, a sense of incessant dread as the two title
characters are pushed out into an unforgiving world because their parents have
no future. They eventual stumbling upon what looks to be a safe harbor in a
cottage in the woods inhabited by an old lady who seems to have a miraculous larder
filled with every type of baked good imaginable. At first what seems like a heaven-sent
release from eventual starvation and death slowly turns until the inevitable
truth of their situation makes itself painfully and bloodily evident. This is
an exceptional film that will reward repeat viewings. For me, it became a thoughtful rumination on fear, loneliness and the desire to live regardless of the cost. Not enough can be said
to praise the excellent lead performances from Alice Krige as the witch and Sophia
(IT) Lillis as Gretel. They are fantastic and this carefully crafted deliberately paced horror tale would not work half as well without their fine work.
THE LIST
JUMANJI: WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE (2017) – 5 (predictable kid’s movie)
HOUSEBOUND (2014) – 9 (rewatch)
THE WOMAN IN THE MOON (1929) – 8 (Lang’s epic science fiction tale)
DJANGO THE BASTARD (1969) – 7 (well done and creepy spaghetti western)
REQUIEM FOR A GRINGO (1968) – 7 (an alternate title spoils the climax but a good SW)
THE HOUSE ON THE OUTSKIRTS (1980) – 7 (well-made Spanish thriller by Eugenio Martin)
REFLECTIONS IN A GOLDEN EYE (1967) – 8 (brilliant drama)
THE LIVING SKELETON (1968) – 8 (Japanese ghost revenge tale – insane!)
GENOCIDE (1968) – 7 (dark Japanese sci-fi tale)
PEEPER (1975) – 6 (merely OK noir styled mystery/comedy)
THE SILVER BULLET (1942) – 5 (typical Johnny Mack Brown B-western)
BIRDS OF PREY (2020) – 8
NIGHTWISH (1989) – 5 (low budget horror effort- its reach exceeds its grasp)
THE CALLER (1987) – 6 (oddball thriller with an unexpected ending)
RIDE’EM COWBOYS! (1942) – 6 (Abbot & Costello silliness)
GRETEL & HANSEL (2020) – 7 (fascinating fairy tale)
FURY OF THE WOLFMAN (1970) – 4 (rewatch)
STIGMA (1980) – 7 (Jose Larraz murder tale)
THE WOLF MAN (1941) – 8 (rewatch)
THE LEGEND OF HILLBILLY JOHN (1972) – 6 (interesting low-budget attempt to adapt Manly Wade Wellman’s Silver John tales)
BATTLE OF THE WORLDS (1961) – 6 (rewatch) (Margheriti’s sci-fi tale with the great Claude Raines)
THE PRODIGY (2019) – 7 (great ‘evil child’ horror story)
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