Showing posts with label OCCULT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OCCULT. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2026

IS HAXAN A HORROR FILM?


Long associated with horror films, HÄXAN was instead meant to be a study of human psychological aberrations in the vision of filmmaker Benjamin Christensen. In other words he didn't--at least purposely--intend to horrify audiences. Still, the arresting imagery of the devil (played by Christensen himself) and his minions, tortured witches and a fantastical scene of the black sabbath along with its perversions have all the earmarks of a vintage horror picture and it can't help but to be considered one.

If you are unfamiliar with this over a century-old intriguing film, the article below will provide you with enough details to--I hope--interest you enough to watch it. There is a shortened version narrated by William Burroughs, but I recommend the restored, full-length version.


WHAT TO WATCH WATCH IN MARCH: HÄXAN (1922)
Making the case for the deeply weird silent film about the history of witchcraft.

By Radha Vatsal | March 17, 2026 | Crimereads.com
Story/Mood: This atmospheric silent film, whose title means “The Witch,” is unlike any other movie I’ve seen. Frankenstein director Guillermo del Toro describes it as “the filmic equivalent of a hellish engraving by Bruegel or a painting by Bosch.”


Häxan combines documentary and fantasy to create an immersive “film essay” that explores everything from the mythology of witchcraft, to the torture and trial of witches, and witches’ sabbaths where the participants kiss the devil’s ass. It culminates in musings about whether poor older women who would be helped by charitable organizations today (today being 1922), or women diagnosed as “hysterics,” might have been marked as witches in the past.


The Look: Gorgeously filmed in black-and-white, with some sequences tinted in deep blue or blood red, Häxan opens with a title card that reads: “Let us look into the history of mysticism and try to explain the mysterious chapter known as the Witch.” The first of the film’s seven sections takes the form of a cinematic lecture about cosmology and ancient beliefs about heaven, hell, and supernatural forces—illustrated with drawings, photographs, and old-style museum-y models, as well as images that are partially animated. This is the magic of early film at its finest—film as a novelty, as pictures that move. The movie then shifts to dramatic re-enactment:

“Through the imagination,” the title card says, “we now journey to the underground home of a witch in the year of our Lord 1488.” That’s when things start to get even weirder as fact blends with fantasy. We get stories about graverobbers, a poor beggar woman who is wrongfully accused of witchcraft, witch trials, lustful priests and nuns visited by Satan, instruments of torture, and witches flying on their broomsticks through the night.


Crew: Benjamin Christensen, Häxan’s Danish writer and director, also plays the devil in this film, lasciviously wiggling his tongue as he bursts into the frame. His goal, he explained, was to “throw light on the psychological causes of these witch trials by demonstrating their connections with certain abnormalities of the human psyche, abnormalities which have existed throughout history and still exist in our midst.”


Also, Christensen wanted to understand “whether a film is able to hold the public’s interest without mass effects, without sentimentality, without suspense, without heroes and heroines—in short, without all those things on which a good film is otherwise constructed.”


Where to watch: The Criterion Channel as well as other streaming services. I watched Häxan on the big screen with a packed crowd at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, NY. The film had long been lingering in my drawer as a DVD (yes, from way back when!). Seeing it on the big screen with live piano and a fully engaged audience as part of the museum’s Halloween line-up was a great way to appreciate the stunning visuals and the strangeness for the first time.


Other notes: 105 minutes, black and white. The Criterion version features music from the 1922 Danish premiere. In his essay, “Häxan, The Real Unreal,” film scholar Chris Fujiwara says that censors in several countries, including Germany, France, and the United States—“objected to the movie’s numerous scenes of torture, sex, nudity, and anticlericalism, and only after undergoing extensive reediting could it be publicly shown in those markets.”


Some companion pieces if you’re interested in the subject (and I know there’s a lot out there, so these are just two): Robert Eggers’s The Witch (2015), in which the filmmaker treats witches as part of a belief system and therefore real; and Rivka Galchen’s 2021 novel, Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch—set in Germany in the 17th century, about the witch trial of the famous astronomer, Johannes Keppler’s mother.


Saturday, September 30, 2023

THE MYSTERY OF WINCHESTER HOUSE


We're familiar with haunted house movies like THE HAUNTING, HELL HOUSE and HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL. There are also a multitude of other, "real life" haunted houses, such as the one in Amityville on Long Island. While not necessarily haunted in the true sense of the word, the infamous Winchester House still defies all logic and the story behind it remains a mystery.

In the 1880's, when Sarah Winchester's daughter died, followed by her husband (the son of Oliver, the owner of Winchester Repeating Arms), she was devastated. She soon packed her bags and headed to California to start a new life. She bought an 8-room farmhouse outside of San Jose and made plans to renovate it.

Then, something strange happened. At the rate of $1,000 a day (she was left with millions), she had her crew build a maze of corridors and rooms, including doors that opened into walls. As the work continued, Sarah claimed she was guided by "spirits" and maintained her nearly complete isolation in the house. When she died, the mystery of "why?" still remained and does until this day.

This article, from TRUE WEST (May-June 1963) explains the bizarre story.

Here is a LINK to the official Winchester House website.



Saturday, September 16, 2023

JACK KIRBY'S SPIRIT WORLD (PART 1)


SPIRIT WORLD
Vol. 1 No. 1
Hampshire Distributors, Inc. (DC Comics)
Editor: Jack Kirby
Assistant Editors: Steve Sherman; Mark Evanier
Cover: Jack Kirby w/extensive revisions by Neal Adams
Pages: 52
Cover price: 50 cents

One of the weirdest-ever anomalies in comic book publishing is JACK KIRBY'S SPIRIT WORLD, an experimental, full-size 'zine where he was apparently given full rein over the content. Drenched in Kirby's burgeoning classic 70's cosmic excursions, it landed from outer space in the Fall of 1971, around the time that the Fourth World Mothership was just lifting off.

The images nearly explode off the page and his use of collage only intensifies the kaleidoscopic, mind-numbing visuals. If anyone doesn't think Mr. Kirby was a genius after they see this, they are either being kept prisoner in a room without windows or don't read comics!

Despite the colophon, SW was published by DC, who gave him the go-ahead for this project with a wink and a nod. He was assisted by Steve Sherman and Mark Evanier, who eventually authored his biography. His pencils were inked by Vinnie Colletta.

The stories were all psychic/occult-themed, including a wild one that was about a woman who foresees JKF's death and a captioned photo story concerning a California UFO cult (!). Sherman and Evanier add a text story and there is one page of Sergio Aragones cartoons. Also included is the 4-page pull-out poster that originally came with the magazine.

SW suffered from really lousy distribution and was probably at least partially due to DC's half-hearted support of the project. As a result, mountains of warehouse copies were left over and found themselves remaindered to intrepid hucksters who sold them over the years to collectors, mostly for cheap.

DC loosened the chain one more time for a Kirby magazine-size comic, IN THE DAYS OF THE MOB (coming to WoM soon!). While the material was a little more conventional, what do you do for product placement on the newsstand with something like these?

One more note -- there was announcement in February of this year that there was a planned relaunch of SPIRIT WORLD by -- wait for it -- DC! Does it get any weirder?

Gaze ye now in wonderment, into the spirit world of Jack Kirby!