Starring - Rebekah Kennedy (Creature, The Curse of Babylon), Kristina Klebe (Halloween, Zone of the Dead), and Tim Fox (Westworld, Shameless)
Release Date - 2021
Tagline - "Witches don't die before leaving their legacy..."
Format - Streaming (Online Screener)
Format - Streaming (Online Screener)
Rating (out of 5):
Two Witches was nothing like the handful of posters I had seen for it. I was expecting an atmospheric tale with witches for this Halloween season. Sadly, that was not the case. The film is a lengthy anthology consisting of two segments similar to George A. Romero and Dario Argento’s Two Evil Eyes. The acting in this one is very well done. The cast really goes all out and they work so well together. The characters are written in a way that you either really like them or you hate them. The cast does a fantastic job at bringing those aspects out of the viewer. Both segments are well acted and the casting is fantastic. The two stories in this one is hit and miss for me and from what I’ve seen in other reviews I feel as if that’s common for most that have seen the film. I liked the first segment pretty well. I liked the witch and the pregnant woman aspect. Witches and baby napping and baby feasting is the type of folklore I love seeing in films. It could have been in a different manner with a little more emphasis on the witch instead of the expecting hipster couple. The second story is a step away from the folk horror that makes witch flicks so enjoyable for me. It is a bit more grounded than the first segment and more horror oriented but it doesn’t gain as much traction as the first segment does. It had the potential to be something much more visceral but chose to be a character piece instead of a gruesome story. Finally, the film has some moments of solid tension and suspense along with one scene with great practical effects. However, it’s not the bloodbath most horror fans are looking for this Halloween season. Overall, Two Witches starts out with a very promising story with great atmosphere and a solid cast of characters but moves to a story that just doesn’t work or fits the film in my opinion. It’s a decent first time watch but has no replay value.
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