ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,8/10
7,9 k
MA NOTE
Paranoïa et superstition dans l'Europe du XVe siècle.Paranoïa et superstition dans l'Europe du XVe siècle.Paranoïa et superstition dans l'Europe du XVe siècle.
- Prix
- 5 victoires et 9 nominations au total
Tanja Petrovsky
- Swinda
- (as Tanja Petrovskij)
Killian Abeltshauser
- Farmer
- (as Kilian Abeltshauser)
Avis en vedette
About half an hour into the film it gives up to tell a story and becomes a picture album. I've read the film took 4 years to make with a one year brake in-between. Makes you wonder if you have just seen the intermediate state where they took all the filmed material they had so far, strung it together for the sole purpose of achieving a length of circa a 100 minutes and call it a finished movie.
"HAGAZUSSA" For the most part is a very dark and grim atmospheric film that's beautifully shot and well performed by the actors. It had great potential to go beyond the depth of "The Witch" but doesn't scratch the surface enough for you to feel enlightened or better informed by what you just witnessed for an hour & 45 minutes. The lack luster ending that everyone falsely raves about is pathetic and that's a gross understatement. Did the film have it's moments yes but none of them were slam dunks and every one of those scenes left points on the board because it never followed through. Whether lying in bed with her mother or watching from behind her in the lake from 50 yards away, That's not enough when you compare it to films like "MIDSOMER" or "HEREDITARY".
Definitely had potential but nothing here is a must see or disturbing enough to make it memorable 6 months from now. And that's truly disappointing to waste such a good effort.
Folk horror subgenre is close to my heart, and so I finally had to check this German/Austrian nightmare. It's certainly a divisive one. The ever-raging battle of relationship between style and substance among film fans continues here, too, and I seem to land in the middle. I believe director Lukas Feigelfeld, to whom this is film school graduation project, intended a trip. Very gloomy, meditative, earthly trip.
The film contains only a few lines of dialogue. The plot is barely even there, as the movie, in every minute of it, thrives on atmosphere and feelings. The main character doesn't reason much, or scheme, or rationalize, the "plot", or rather mood is driven by mere feelings of hers. Heavy feelings, building an atmosphere that almost tires you. The pacing is much slower than your typical described slow-burner, and the movie demands some sinking into for it to execute its intentions. It's almost like a film equivalent of a gothic painting, a mural that you have to consume with long attention to all detail. The cinematography is beautiful, locations isolated, mossy, almost ancient-like.
A patient man's film, and indeed one for those who appreciate strong on emphasis style, and unspoken moods. On a side note, I had noticed plenty of people put "Hagazussa" against "The VVitch" with the latter coming in second, and with that I, in good conscience, have to disagree. 6/10.
The film contains only a few lines of dialogue. The plot is barely even there, as the movie, in every minute of it, thrives on atmosphere and feelings. The main character doesn't reason much, or scheme, or rationalize, the "plot", or rather mood is driven by mere feelings of hers. Heavy feelings, building an atmosphere that almost tires you. The pacing is much slower than your typical described slow-burner, and the movie demands some sinking into for it to execute its intentions. It's almost like a film equivalent of a gothic painting, a mural that you have to consume with long attention to all detail. The cinematography is beautiful, locations isolated, mossy, almost ancient-like.
A patient man's film, and indeed one for those who appreciate strong on emphasis style, and unspoken moods. On a side note, I had noticed plenty of people put "Hagazussa" against "The VVitch" with the latter coming in second, and with that I, in good conscience, have to disagree. 6/10.
What a trip. It's tough to judge or rate movies like this. I can see how some will cherish this as masterpiece, while the majority will just be annoyed and think this is one of the worst things they've watched. It's a very fine line and I'm not entirely sure it is being walked on with grace or subtlety for that matter.
It's in black and white and it's mysterious to say the least. You have cryptic messages and you have characters (re)acting very weird. It is supposed to leave almost everything open to interpretation, it is also supposed to scare you at times. Also if it matters to you, one way or the other, the movie has nudity in it. Not in an exciting way mind you, and also there is psychological and some physical violence in it too. And it also messes with your mind ... maybe you can make sense of it, maybe you'll watch it again, to discover new things ... or maybe you will just shut it off after a couple of minutes ...
It's in black and white and it's mysterious to say the least. You have cryptic messages and you have characters (re)acting very weird. It is supposed to leave almost everything open to interpretation, it is also supposed to scare you at times. Also if it matters to you, one way or the other, the movie has nudity in it. Not in an exciting way mind you, and also there is psychological and some physical violence in it too. And it also messes with your mind ... maybe you can make sense of it, maybe you'll watch it again, to discover new things ... or maybe you will just shut it off after a couple of minutes ...
This debut and thesis film,"Hagazussa" by Lukas Feigelfeld is an exploration of 15th century European "witch" mythology, rural folklore and superstitions. It's a slow burn but it's visuals and sound mixing are astounding, which is why it has received many nominations and awards since 2017.
His style is yet to evolve, since the film's weak point is telling a story unlike Robert Egger's "The Witch" (2015) does well, inspired by U.S. colonial history. Except for the usages of three title cards to break the narrative, the story gets muddled. After the film viewing, I had seen many confused faces, not understanding what has happened as they left the room.
It's strengths of this emerging director to make the natural looks unnatural. The depictions of a bold performance by Aleksandra Cwen as "Alburn" amongst the Austrian landscape is truly visionary. But again for the general viewers it may not be enough to get into the story.
The film as a story explored moral conflicts amongst the villagers, referring to their persecution of Jews and others outside of the Christian spectrum.
His style is yet to evolve, since the film's weak point is telling a story unlike Robert Egger's "The Witch" (2015) does well, inspired by U.S. colonial history. Except for the usages of three title cards to break the narrative, the story gets muddled. After the film viewing, I had seen many confused faces, not understanding what has happened as they left the room.
It's strengths of this emerging director to make the natural looks unnatural. The depictions of a bold performance by Aleksandra Cwen as "Alburn" amongst the Austrian landscape is truly visionary. But again for the general viewers it may not be enough to get into the story.
The film as a story explored moral conflicts amongst the villagers, referring to their persecution of Jews and others outside of the Christian spectrum.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGraduation film of director Lukas Feigelfeld.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021)
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et surveiller les recommandations personnalisées
- How long is Hagazussa?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 13 253 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 041 $ US
- 21 avr. 2019
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 21 487 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 42m(102 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39:1
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant