r Wicked Things Horror Blog: nick cage
Showing posts with label nick cage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nick cage. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Human Sacrifice in Cinema & Literature

Many derivatives of "The Lottery" have been written and portrayed in cinema.  Shirley Jackson's original story was made into a film.  In a small town of about 300 residents, the locals are excited and nervous on June 27. Children gather stones as adults convene for their yearly event, that in the local tradition is practiced to ensure a good harvest.  The head of each family draws a slip of paper from a black box; Bill Hutchinson gets the one slip with a black spot, meaning that his family has been chosen. In the next round, each Hutchinson family member draws a slip, and Bill's wife Tessie gets the marked slip. You can watch the film adaptation on YouTube here.

The Lottery was also done in 1996 and starred Keri Russell.  You can watch the film on YouTube here.  
There was a film made that was very reminiscent of Jackson's short story and the subsequent film adaptation in 2006, entitled Population 436.  A couple notables in this film were Jeremy Sisto and Fred Durst.  Steve Kady (Jeremy Sisto), a US Census Bureau representative is sent to a remote and tiny town, Rockwell Falls to interview residents for the census.

On the way to Rockwell Falls he is distracted by a woman falling off a horse and his vehicle hits a pothole and his tires pop.  He is assisted by Deputy Bobby Caine (Fred Durst), the Sheriff's Deputy, who drives him into Rockwell Falls and helps Steve find boarding.  During his stay, Kady notices the oddness of the town and the people within. Steve's research reveals that the town's population has remained at exactly 436 for over 100 years.

After locating odd texts on biblical numerology, Kady comes to the realization that the town residents have assigned a mystical significance to the number 436 and are willing to go to bizarre and extreme lengths to keep the population at exactly that number.



The Wicker Man falls in line with the odd small, remote town feel, where the "guest of honor" arrives and is treated well and then the horror ensues.  Its just done differently and has a great many elements that deepen the story and make it much more of a mystery.

 The Wicker Man (1973) stars Christopher Lee and Ingrid Pitt.  Inspired by the basic scenario of David Pinner's 1967 novel Ritual, the story centers on the visit of Police Sergeant Neil Howie to the isolated island of Summerisle, in search of a missing girl the locals claim never existed. Howie, a devout Christian, is appalled to find that the inhabitants of the island practice a form of Celtic paganism.

The Wicker Man was remade and adapted a little differently in 2006 and starred Nick Cage as well as Ellen Burstyn, Leelee Sobieski, Frances Conroy, Aaron Eckhart, and James Franco.






Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Wicker Man 2006 Adaptation

I finally watched the remake of The Wicker Man, which was adapted from the original 1973 British version into something a tad bit different.  It wasn't the same movie verbatim, and all the characters of importance, except for the California Cop, Edward Malus, played by Nicholas Cage were all women.  Other than the characters all being women, and a few plot surprises, the movie is the same and it ends the same, but the ending was super cool and not a boring burning like the first one!

Here are some of the highlights of the film.  Dad says you never hit a girl, but Sister Beech had it coming!




 Malus get a letter from his ex-fiancĂ©e, Willow Woodward that her daughter, Rowan is missing. Some of the main characters were played by Ellen Burstyn, as Sister Summerisle, a reprisal of the original role taken by Christopher Lee in the seventies version as Lord Summerisle.  Leelee Sobieski was in it as well and Francis Conroy, the mom from Six Feet Under, my favorite HBO show of all time!  Is Francis Conroy not the most adorable lady in the world.  I wish she was my mom.  James Franco is in it, I guess, but I never really noticed.



There is no Neo Pagan nudity in this one, unfortunately, but it was made into a more palatable mainstream film, which I didn't really dig.  I hated that the musical part and the dancing naked fertility ritual was omitted entirely.  It made the film boring and took away from some of the oddness.  I did like the creepy old twins that say everything at the same time, though.  They were cool.  Basically, Summerisle is run by women for women, and the men on the island are used simply for work and procreation.  Its creepy, and the different plot twists almost make it a different movie, well kinda. 


Oh, if you want to watch Nick Cage punch chicks all day, definitely rent this flick. 


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