Before seeing it I had a sneaking suspicion, but now that
I've actually watched the movie, I'm fairly certain that The Last
Witch Hunter was made specifically for me. The Vin Diesel-starring
fantasy adventure is gonzo and over the top in a way you rarely encounter
anymore, especially in expensive mainstream movies, but it lines up damn near
perfectly with my cinematic proclivities.
This is a movie that is going to get absolutely savaged by
most critics, but if you’re a fan of insane, semi-mystical, campy exploitation-style
horror romps of yesteryear, it might just entertain the hell out of you. If
your tastes run towards the likes of The Wicker Man,
Night of the Demon, and Witchfinder
General, this may be right up your alley. The closest thing I can
think of that we have in the current landscape are Ben Wheatley films like
Kill List and A Field in England, though
The Last Witch Hunter has neither the artfulness of those,
nor the darkness.
More than any of those films, however, The Last
Witch Hunter is inherently silly and shallow. I’ll never claim that
it is great, or even particularly deep art, but as a piece of junk food cinema,
a hearty helping of empty filmic calories, it’s a wildly amusing ride — if this
was an artifact of the 1970s, it would be a bona fide cult classic among
certain segments of horror fanatics.
Diesel stars as Kaulder, an 800-year-old witch hunter who
was cursed with eternal life and has been wandering around hunting witches ever
since. In order to stop a plague that will destroy all life as we know it, he
must team up with a young witch named Chloe (Game ofThrones’ Rose Leslie) and his priest sidekick, the 37th Dolan (Elijah
Wood), a little wiener of a man, to put a stop to this nefarious plan. On some
level, this watches like a black magic police procedural.
There are a few more specifics, but that’s the main
narrative thrust, and most of the plot details aren’t all that well thought
out. You’ve got the ancient organization that Kaulder works for, the Axe and
Cross, but aside from the fact that they’re old, vaguely Catholic in nature,
and regulate witches, there’s nothing more to know — though the council of
leaders does look like an ‘80s band, which one character correctly points out.
In a similar fashion, the plot involves a rogue coven trying
to resurrect the Witch Queen (Julie Engelbrecht), a comically shoddy looking
CGI creature. Something about the plan has to do with Kaulder’s past, but the
machinations could have come from any generic Dungeons &
Dragons playbook. There’s basically zero effort put into any sort of
backstory or explaining the hows or whys of the situation — at a certain point,
all I could do was throw up my hands, say what the hell, and let it wash over
me with giddy abandon.
The characters aren’t profound or nuanced in any way.
Michael Caine shows up as Kaulder’s only friend, Leslie is a one-note sassy
rebel, and Wood is, like I said, a wiener in a skin-tight white mock turtleneck.
All the villains comically overplay their hand, shrieking ominous threats.
Diesel, for his part, is essentially the same as he is in every movie, and you
could have pieced his performance together from leftover Fast & Furious outtakes. Except for the hallucinatory flashback scenes to
old-timey times, of which there are many, and where he has a crazy mammoth
beard and pseudo mullet. Still, he’s likable and charismatic, and there’s some
quality about him that’s hard not to watch.
Right now you’re probably reading this and saying to
yourself that this movie sounds god-awful terrible. I have no doubt that,
should you actually watch The Last Witch Hunter, many of you
will have just that reaction. But there are those of you out there who are
going to watch this and absolutely revel in the gleeful absurdity of the entire
shebang.
At it’s peak, The Last Witch Hunter is
like some epic adventure metal song come to life. There are magical
butterflies, cupcakes full of maggots (maggots that are, somehow, also
magical), faces being peeled off, swarms of diseased flies descending on New
York City, a blind baker getting swallowed by an angry tree, and so many more
WTF moments that leave the audience scratching their head. Did I mention there
are flaming swords? No? Well, there are, and they’re awesome, which is to be
expected because they’re flaming swords.
The Last Witch Hunter is totally bonkers,
and is only occasionally aware of that fact. Diesel brings a self-referential
sense of humor to moments, which are entertaining enough, but when it really
goes off the rails, leaving the audience members laughing to ourselves asking,
“What?” that’s when it is an absolute blast.
Hell, in a lot of ways, this is far and away the nerdiest
movie of the year, way more so than any of the glut of comic book and superhero
movies crowding the metroplex. With fantasy and magic, spells and witches and
sorcerers, this is like a D&D campaign come to life, and
with Vin Diesel, a longtime gamer himself, in the lead, that enthusiasm shines
through, and it’s easy to get infected with this particular plague. Sure,
perhaps The Last Witch Hunter is a dumbed down Game
of Thrones, but if that sounds enjoyable, this is the movie for you.
[Grade: B-]
No comments:
Post a Comment