Film Review
In 1922, the esteemed Danish film director Benjamin Christensen
achieved worldwide notoriety and acclaim (in roughly equal proportion)
with his most ambitious film,
Häxan
(a.k.a.
The Witches or
Witchcraft Through the Ages).
Part documentary, part lurid visual fantasy, the film was made for
Svensk Film on a budget of two million kronor, the most expensive
silent film made in Scandinavia. With its unflinchingly graphic
depictions of medieval torture, satanic rituals and sexual perversion,
Häxan aroused instant
controversy and was banned in many countries. For many
years, the film was seen outside Sweden only in a 77 minute long
truncated version, but even in its heavily censored state it manages to
be a provocative and totally enthralling piece of cinema.
It is only comparatively recently that
Häxan has been widely
available in its original version. In its unexpurgated form, the
film offers such repulsive delights as gargoyle-like demons feasting on
unchristened babies, witches kissing the rear end of Old Nick himself,
and some chillingly matter-of-fact accounts of mutilation practised by
professional witch tormenters of the 15th century. Christensen
was a reasonably accomplished actor as well as a director (he
subsequently played a leading role in Carl Theodor Dreyer's
Mikaël,
1924), so who better to portray the Devil than Christensen himself?
Whilst the film certainly has plenty of shock value and deserves its
reputation as one of the classic horror pieces of the silent era, it is
also endowed with an abundance of humour, of the deliciously
black variety. After a dry academic dissertation (consisting
of stills that are likely to be found in any textbook on
witchcraft) the spectator is treated to a succession of imaginative
vignettes illustrating the supposed activities of witches and their
persecution by the Church, the horror sweetened with more than a
smattering of dark comedy. In one sequence, an oversexed old maid
is desperate to ignite the libido of a monk she has taken a fancy to,
so she visits her local witch, who promptly offers her a potion made
from doves' hearts and cat poo. Later on, a toothless senior
citizen is enjoying some hospitality when she is dragged away and given
the full 'confess or be burnt' treatment; she claims a sweet revenge by
denouncing the cruel minxes who denounced her. Despite the
bleakness of the subject matter (a large chunk of which was gleaned
from
Malleus Maleficarum, a
handbook for 15th-century witch hunters), Christensen has a knack of
teasing out the lighter side. The middle portion of
Häxan may be a shocking
spectacle of gore and demonic perversion, but it is compulsive viewing,
deliriously funny in places.
The pièce de résistance is the last of the seven segments
that make up the film, a thought-provoking coda which attempts a 20th
century rationalisation of the phenomenon of the witch.
Christensen points out that while there are no witches today (TV
game-show hosts excluded, of course) there are still individuals who
are feared and persecuted by society. We lump them all under the
banner of 'mentally ill' and lock them away in institutions, where they
may be subjected to degrading forms of treatment which are not too
dissimilar from medieval torture. Christensen's thesis is that
these unfortunates were the very same people who, in more primitive
times, were mistaken for witches. We are left with the
sobering thought that perhaps very little has changed since the Middle
Ages. True, we've managed to kick the habit of roasting old
ladies on the village green, but we still carry with us an irrational
fear for that which we do not understand, and a willingness to reject
and persecute those who do not conform to our notion of
normality. Witches have haunted us for millennia, and we seem
strangely reluctant to let them go...
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For hundreds, if not thousands of years, witches have predominated in
folklore, these being the likely instigators of all the ills and
mishaps that afflict mankind. Accounts of witchcraft in medieval
times are legion, and how easy it must have been to attribute some
disease or other unexplained phenomena to the workings of malign
influences. No wonder men of the Church were so ruthless in
hunting down and persecuting witches. It was for their own good
that these servants of the Devil, mostly poor old women, should be made
to confess or else burned alive. Of course, no one believes in
witches today. And yet there are still people who are shunned by
society and ill-treated - those afflicted with mental disorders.
Can it be that these unfortunates were what our ancestors mistook for
witches...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.