While “The Craft: Legacy” is a sequel to1996’s “The Craft” — and is once again about four high school girls who form a coven— the results are a little different this time out, and so is the point of the movie.
Zoe Lister-Jones, who made the interesting 2017 film “Band Aid” about marital discord,is the writer and director, and she sets out to make a feminist statement with “The Craft: Legacy” through unconventional means. The results are interesting, but mixed.
In the previous Andrew Fleming-directed film released in 1996 starring Neve Campbell, Robin Tunney, Fairuza Balk and Rachel True, the idea was that witchcraft, though it can bring some temporary dividends, is dangerous. Things can easily get out of control, particularly when the people trying to do the controlling are teenagers. So, in a sense, “The Craft” used the subject of witchcraft for what was ultimately a conventional moral message.
而不是使用巫术的主题movie about women’s empowerment has some appeal, but only up to the point where you start asking yourself what’s the ultimate source of the power being sought. Basically, Lister-Jones is asking us to hold in our heads two seemingly contradictory ideas: that these powers are coming from the dark side, from what are essentially evil forces; and that these forces are being used to promote a social good.
From an anti-feminist point of view, there would be no contradiction at all. An anti-feminist might watch “The Craft: Legacy” and think, “That’s perfect. They’re harnessing the powers of darkness to promote a social evil.” But that’s not the point of this movie. The movie’s point is the complete opposite of that, just confused.
一个t the start, young Lily (Cailee Spaeny) and her mother (Michelle Monaghan) are moving into Mom’s boyfriend’s house. Mom is ecstatic to have a new man in her life, and at first the guy (David Duchovny) seems all right. But he has a peculiar career. He writes books in praise of masculinity (“The Hallowed Masculine”) and lectures around the country, encouraging men to be manly.
Lily starts school and is humiliated on her first day when she has a menstruation mishap. But three girls (played by Gideon Adlon,Lovie Simoneand Zoey Luna) take her under their wing. They’re aspiring teenage witches, and they intuit that Lily might be their “fourth.” Having four members — representing air, fire, water and earth — makes them exponentially more powerful.
They put a spell on the biggest jerk they know, Timmy (Nicholas Galitzine), who normally does everything he can to make their lives miserable. All at once he becomes courteous and deferential, and he starts describing himself as “cisgendered” and talking about “heteronormativity.” He starts playing Princess Nokia music at parties because he admires her politics.
一个ll this is mildly funny, but in a way that turns the movie back on itself. Are we supposed to see Timmy as a satire of wokeness or as an evolved version of himself?
一个t one point, the movie suggests that the spell is unlocking this boy’s real self, which, in terms of character, has a certain interest. But the satire pulls things in the other direction.
Ultimately, it’s more dramatically rich for Lily and her friends to be wrestling with their own impulses and their own hard-to-manage powers than it is for them to find themselves struggling with a supernaturally charged version of “toxic masculinity.” By focusing on the latter, Lister-Jones bypasses some potentially fruitful exploration of character in favor of a conflict with a foregone conclusion.
不过,这是续集“工艺”的人。For what it is, the movie’s OK, except that it tried to be more than it is, and it isn’t.
L“The Craft: Legacy”:Horror. Starring Cailee Spaeny, Lovie Simone and Zoey Luna. Directed by Zoe Lister-Jones. (PG-13. 97 minutes.) Available on video on demand starting Wednesday, Oct. 28.