Showing posts with label HAXAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HAXAN. 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.


Friday, July 12, 2024

NEW DVDS COMING OUR WAY


It seems like the only thing left to do with classic horror films that have made it through numerous VHS, DVD and Blu-ray editions is to upgrade to 2K or 4K versions and re-package them. Walmart will be doing just that with their exclusive releases of Universal's DRACULA and FRANKENSTEIN steelbooks.

I don't know about you, but how clearly do we need to see an old black and white horror film? How many times have we gotten excited about the special features only to see that they've been recycled over and over again? For me, I'm quite satisfied with my Universal Blu-ray collection and other classics on just plain 'ol DVD. Personally, I don't mind a little grain to the film stock, but I'm just a traditionalist in that respect, I guess.
 

With the 4th of July behind us, for horror fans, that means it's time to get ready for the spooky fall season. This includes shopping for new Halloween decor, costumes, and movies. When it comes to this blood-sucking genre, you can’t get any more classic than the Universal Monster movies from the 30s and 40s. The original cinematic universe that started with 1931’s Dracula and Frankenstein is closing in on the century mark. Now, to honor modern horror’s gothic origins, the first two Universal Monsters are getting new 4K steelbooks.

These Walmart exclusive 4K/Blu-ray/Digital Code combo pack steelbooks are for Tod Browning’s Dracula and James Whale’s Frankenstein. Both releases feature stunning artwork depicting an iconic scene for each respected film. Dracula sees Bela Lugosi’s title Count rushing up his castle’s stairs with Helen Chandler’s Mina, while Frankenstein has Boris Karloff’s Monster with Dr. Frankenstein’s bride-to-be, Mae Clarke’s Elizabeth. The man-made creation is pinned between the angry villagers and the burning windmill. These steelbooks will have the same special features as their original box set and 4K slipcover editions.

[SOURCE: Collider.com.]

Now, on to some more interesting releases coming up this Halloween season. I've particularly got my eye on the new Haxan edition. It is a fascinating silent film (you can read my article on the full background of this film in CASTLE OF FRANKENSTEIN). I, VAMPIRI and PLANET OF THE VAMPIRES sound interesting as well.


Radiance Films Announces October Releases

Radiance Films has announced its October batch of Blu-ray releases. They are: Daiei Gothic: Japanese Ghost Stories (1959-1968), Dogra Magra (1988), Häxan (1922), and Lust of the Vampire (1957).

Daiei Gothic: Japanese Ghost Stories

Description: A collection of three of Japan's most famous ghost stories that have haunted people for centuries. Kenji Misumi (Lone Wolf and Cub) directs The Ghost of Yotsuya, in which a woman returns from the grave as a horribly disfigured phantom to torment her husband and his new bride. In The Snow Woman, directed by Tokuzo Tanaka (Zatoichi), a woodcutter must keep his oath to a vengeful female spirit or pay the ultimate price. The Bride from Hades by Satsuo Yamamoto (Shinobi) sees a handsome samurai so enchanted by a courtesan's beauty that he fails to realise she is a ghost. These three film versions from the Daiei studio form a pinnacle of atmospheric Japanese horror. Their elegant visuals and ominous shadows rival the best of Terence Fisher or Mario Bava, while their iconic female ghosts would greatly influence Asian genre cinema, from Hong Kong fantasy spectacles such as A Chinese Ghost Story to J-horror.

LIMITED EDITION BOX SET SPECIAL FEATURES
  • New 4K restorations of The Bride from Hades and The Snow Woman
  • High-Definition digital transfer of The Ghost of Yotsuya
  • Uncompressed mono PCM audio for each film
  • Optional English subtitles for all films
  • Newly designed box and booklet artwork by Time Tomorrow
  • Six postcards featuring original archive imagery from the films
  • Limited edition 80-page perfect bound book featuring new writing by authors Tom Mes and Zack Davisson, newly translated archival reviews and ghost stories by Lafcadio Hearn
THE GHOST OF YOTSUYA
  • New interview with filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa
  • A visual essay on the history and adaptations of the classic Ghost of Yotsuya story by author Kyoko Hirano
  • Trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Filippo Di Battista
THE BRIDE FROM HADES
  • Audio commentary by author Jasper Sharp
  • New interview with filmmaker Hiroshi Takahashi
  • Trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Filippo Di Battista
THE SNOW WOMAN
  • New interview with filmmaker Masayuki Ochiai
  • A visual essay on writer Lafcadio Hearn
  • Trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Filippo Di Battista
U.S. AND CANADA STREET DATE: OCTOBER 29.
UK STREET DATE: OCTOBER 28.


Dogra Magra

Description: A man wakes in an asylum with no memory. Dr Wakabayashi helps him to recall his past in which he killed his bride on their wedding day. Part of his memory becomes linked to another doctor, Dr Masaki, and a manuscript, Dogra Magra. As the two doctors treat him, reality and fantasy become blurred and the patient becomes unsure of his identity or his doctors' experiments. The final feature film by Toshio Matsumoto (Funeral Parade of Roses) is an adaptation of the celebrated novel by Kyusaku Yumeno, a period set gothic tale with a sense of dreamy dread that recalls Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Cure and the locked room mystery of Shutter Island. A stunningly shot phantasmagoria by Tatsuo Suzuki (Pastoral: To Die in the Country), Dogra Magra is presented on Blu-ray for the first time outside of Japan.

Special Features and Technical Specs:
  • High-Definition digital transfer supervised by director of photography Tatsuo Suzuki and producer Shuji Shibata
  • Audio commentary by director Toshio Matsumoto (2003)
  • Interview with Toshio Matsumoto (2003, 21 mins)
  • A visual essay by programmer and curator Julian Ross (2024)
  • Instructions on Ahodara Sutra (a popular Japanese chant delivered by Dr. Masaki in the film) by legendary street performer Hiroshi Sakano (16 mins)
  • Trailer
  • New and improved English subtitles
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow
  • Limited edition booklet featuring new writing by Hirofumi Sakamoto, president of the Postwar Japan Moving Image Archive and author Jasper Sharp on screenwriter Atsushi Yamatoya plus an interview with producer Shuji Shibata and Matsumoto's director's statement
  • Limited edition of 3000 copies, presented in full-height Scanavo packaging with removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings
U.S. AND CANADA STREET DATE: OCTOBER 29.
UK STREET DATE: OCTOBER 28.


Häxan


Description: A series of eerie vignettes depict images of sorcery and evil on screen, from representations of occultism and religious hypocrisy to a chilling witch hunt in the Middle Ages. Directed by and starring Benjamin Christensen as the Devil, Häxan mixes documentary and fiction forms to create an unsettling brew that prefigures everything from Gothic horror to the found footage film. This legendary horror film was released in numerous edits and this edition collects four such versions of the film for the first time in the UK, including a 2K restoration by the original production company Svensk Filmindustri.

Special Features and Technical Specs:
  • 2K restoration by Svensk Filmindustri, presented with three optional scores, by Matti Bye (2006), Bronnt Industries Kapital (2007), and Geoff Smith (2007)
  • Witchcraft through the Ages - an alternate cut of the film featuring narration by William S. Boroughs and soundtrack by Jean-Luc Ponty (1968, 77 mins)
  • Häxan - The Esoteric Cut - an alternate cut of the film featuring English intertitles and soundtrack by Lawrence Leherissey (Date unknown, 84 mins)
  • Witchcraft through the Ages - a French version of the film featuring narration by Jean-Pierre Kalfon (1990, 82 mins)
  • Introduction by director Benjamin Christensen (1941, 8 mins)
  • Outtakes (1922, 12 mins)
  • Recently discovered costume screen test (1922, 2 mins)
  • Visual essay by Vito A. Rowlands, author of the forthcoming BFI Film Classics edition of Häxan (2024)
  • Audio commentary by Guy Adams and A.K. Benedict (2024)
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow
  • Six postcards of original promotional stills
  • Limited edition 80-page book featuring new writing by Pamela Hutchinson, Daniel Bird, Kat Ellinger, Brad Stevens plus archival writing and extracts from the press book
  • Limited edition of 6000 copies, presented in rigid box and full-height Scanavo packaging with removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings
UK STREET DATE: OCTOBER 28.

Planet of the Vampires Standard Edition

Description: In the outer reaches of deep space, the spaceship Galliott answers a distress signal from Aura, an unexplored planet. As the ship attempts to land, members of the crew inexplicably begin to attack one another. This is the start of a terrifying expedition into the unknown, one plagued by paranoia, possession and violent mayhem wrought upon the unsuspecting explorers by the planet's mysterious inhabitants. A sci-fi horror hybrid from genre master Mario Bava (Blood and Black Lace), Planet of the Vampires is widely regarded as one of the most influential genre films ever made, with a clear influence on films such as Alien and Pitch Black. With a uniquely chilly atmosphere and fantastic production design that belies its low budget origins, Planet of the Vampires is a true genre classic.

Special Features and Technical Specs:
  • 4K scan of the film from the original negative under the supervision of Lamberto Bava and carried out at Fotocinema in Rome in collaboration with CSC Cineteca Nazionale
  • High-Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of the Italian (89 mins) and English (88 mins) versions of the film
  • Alternate Kendall Schmidt score
  • Uncompressed mono audio
  • Archival audio commentary by Tim Lucas, author of Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark (2014)
  • Transmissions from a Haunted World - A new documentary which explores Planet of the Vampires, Mario Bava and the connection between gothic and science fiction. Co-directed by Dima Ballin and Kat Ellinger; featuring interviews with Guy Adams, Xavier Aldana Reyes, Alexandra Benedict, Johnny Mains and John Llewellyn Probert (2024, 41mins)
  • Archival interview with Lamberto Bava (2022, 13 mins)
  • Super 8 Version - a reconstruction of the cut-down version distributed as Planet der Vampire (17 mins)
  • Joe Dante and Josh Olsen trailer commentaries - the filmmakers provide a short overview of the film (2013/14, 4 mins and 2 mins)
  • Trailer
  • Press and image gallery from the Tim Lucas / Alan Y. Upchurch collection
  • Optional English subtitles for Italian audio and English SDH for English audio
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow
  • Limited edition 20-page booklet featuring a new translation of Renato Pestriniero's original short story
  • Limited edition of 3000 copies, presented in full-height Scanavo packaging with removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings
UK STREET DATE: OCTOBER 28.

Lust of the Vampire (I, VAMPIRI)

Description: A mad scientist captures young women in Paris and drains them of their blood in service of an evil Duchess. Also known as Lust of the Vampire, Riccardo Freda's I vampiri mixes the Bathory and Frankenstein stories to create its gothic tale, Italy's first horror film. Made as a challenge by Freda at breakneck speed, cinematographer Mario Bava would complete direction and post-production of the film, adding his signature in the process. With its baroque imagery and stunning visuals, I vampiri forged the path for Italian horror and remains a landmark of Italian cinema history.

Special Features and Technical Specs:
  • 2K restoration of the film presented with Italian and English audio
  • Audio commentary by Tim Lucas (2023)
  • Thirst of Blood - a featurette on the making of the film with Fabio Melelli, Mario Bava and Dario Michaelis
  • Interview with Lamberto Bava
  • Interview with Leon Hunt, author of Mario Bava: The Artisan as Italian Horror Auteur (2024)
  • Trailers
  • Reversible sleeve featuring artwork based on original posters
  • Booklet featuring new writing by Roberto Curti, author of Italian Gothic Horror Films, 1957-1969
  • Limited edition of 3000 copies, presented in full-height Scanavo packaging with removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings
UK STREET DATE: OCTOBER 28.

Visit the Radiance Films UK website HERE.

Friday, November 11, 2022

CASTLE OF FRANKENSTEIN RETURNS!


Attention villagers of Vasaria! It's time once more to light the torches and storm the castle -- the monster is loose again! Thanks to Don and Vicki Smeraldi, purveyors of the super monster mag, SCARY MONSTERS, the venerable CASTLE OF FRANKENSTEIN is back to thrill and chill readers with 100 pages of chewy monster goodness! This issue is packed with all sorts of great articles, including two from yours truly, covering the centennial of a pair of classic silent films, HAXAN (Witchcraft Through the Ages) and the first full-length vampire feature, NOSFERATU. It's all between a wrap-around cover by artist Scott Jackson in a nod to issue #21 of Calvin T. Beck's original CASTLE OF FRANKENSTEIN, with a painting of Sinbad by Marcus. And for all you CoF traditionalists, it's still published by the Methuselah of monster 'zines, Charles Foster Kane!

Beautifully designed with quality images throughout, you don't want to miss this, Monster Kids!

So, click HERE to order it already! And don't forget to browse the monster shop for all sorts of cool stuff like books, model kits, action figures and tons more.

Front cover by Scott Jackson.

Title page of my article on HAXAN.

Title page of my article on NOSFERATU.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

HORROR MOVIES THAT WERE BANNED


As reported by upbeatnews.com in their article, "Famous Movies That Have Been Banned Around the World", here are a handful of horror movies that were among the batch, including the most banned film of all-time, CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST.


FREAKS
Freaks was a disturbing early thriller type movie that starred a group of disabled sideshow circus acts who get revenge on their ringleader when his heart gets broken by a trapeze artist. Freaks was banned for 30 years in the UK because it showcased disabled folks. The film is only available to view through a second-recording home-video format that's pretty difficult to find. 


SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT
This 1980 slasher movie was intended to be just like the other popular slasher films that are connected to holidays. However, all the other slasher films are more connected to holidays that aren't Christmas. Parents in Brooklyn, Chicago, and Milwaukee all protested this film, which ended up getting the movie much more attention than its traditional marketing route got. So, in the end, the movie was boycotted, which is practically just an unofficial ban. 


HAXAN (WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES)
This Swedish silent film was banned in the United States because it depicted acts of witchcraft and satanism. Haxan was a large proponent behind the "satanic panic" of the 1980s because of its re-cut and re-release that came out in 1960.  


THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE
This horror masterpiece still holds up to today's standards. With its unapologetic gore, refusal to let the good guy win, and its counterculture overtone, there's no wonder why this movie got demonized when it was released in 1974. This movie always has been, and will forever be, one of the most important horror films to ever exist. 

This movie got banned in West Germany, Singapore, and numerous Scandanavian countries because of its disturbing imagery and violent theme. Believe it or not, this movie is still censored in some of the places that it was originally banned. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is the grandfather of the slasher genre, and it deserves a watch if your local government permits it. 


A CLOCKWORK ORANGE
Stanley Kubrick's depiction of a dystopian future and a group of sociopathic youngsters got banned for good reason. The graphic displays of both sexual assault and gory violence won this movie the death sentence in many countries. Kubrick himself was the reason the movie was banned in the UK. It wasn't until his death in 1999 that the movie became available in most European countries. 

After A Clockwork Orange's release, Kubrick noticed that there were some copycat murders happening around the UK. A 16-year-old boy murdered an elderly homeless man after "hearing" about a similar scene in the movie that had yet to be released. This was deeply upsetting for the director, so he decided to pull the movie from the UK market altogether. 


CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST
If you've actually seen this film, you probably know why it got banned. Cannibal Holocaust is one of those "found-footage" movies that feels too graphic to be convincing, but somehow its authenticity sticks. This movie was hugely influential, but it has been equally demonized and censored. 

Cannibal Holocaust came out in 1980. It was immediately banned in 40 countries, but over time those countries eased their grip over the media that the world craves to consume. That being said, this horrific, gore-laden movie is still banned in New Zealand. 

This is the most banned movie ever -- period.


THE EXORCIST
This movie was banned in the United Kingdom before it even got released. Audience members (remember, this is 1973) were reported leaving the movie theater in hysterics, vomiting, and uncontrollably shaking. This movie was even banned in places in the US for a long time. Nowadays, The Exorcist is considered a horror essential. 


PSYCHO
Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho is famous for a multitude of reasons. First of all, this was far from one of the first horror movies ever produced, but for some reason, the fact that horror was being marketed to a wide audience scared the hell out of legislators. The movie made it through Hollywood's review board (barely), but some small towns boycotted showing the film in theaters because its imagery was "sadistic" and "degrading to the human race."

Friday, June 5, 2015

ADVENTURES IN HORROR NO. 2 (PART 1)


“The Stanley mags are just too over-the-top for my tastes. The covers look like the deviant wet-dreams of a sexually frustrated and psychotic teenager.” – From an online comics Forum

ADVENTURES IN HORROR
Volume 1, Number 2
December, 1970
Stanley Publications
Editor: Theodore S. Hecht

Fans of pulp men's magazines and horror stories got an extra Christmas treat when the second issue of Stanley Publications' ADVENTURES IN HORROR was published in December, 1970.

Not missing a beat from its premier a couple of months previous, this sophomore issue was packed from cover to cover with lurid tales with titles like, "The Blood-Drenched Corpse of the Priestess of Satan", "One More Victim for the Coffin's Curse of Horror", and "Bony Fingers From the Grave", and included at least one story by Ed Wood, writing under the preposterous pen name, Obadiah Kempf ("It Takes Two For Terror").

The magazine was most certainly intended for a red-blooded male audience, with its salacious titles and sleazy black and white photographs that were largely staged and taken in-house. One exception is a photo from HAXAN (WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES), obviously used for its combination of sex and satanism. Another is the pair of stills illustrating Kempf/Wood's story taken from his notoriously ridiculous, ORGY OF THE DEAD.

Included here are numerous advertisements for sex books, dating overseas girls, the legendary "blow-up love doll", and, somewhat perversely, a set of big-eyed "moppets" prints. After all, it was the swingin' seventies!