Beautiful landscapes and choice filming locations. Fantastic production design. Subdued tone. Superb costume design and set design. Marvelous score by Greek experimental artist MMMD - darkly ambient, droning, shifting subtly but masterfully, and helping to build incredible, tense atmosphere. Phenomenal sound design. Tremendous, thoughtful camerawork. Outstanding performances. Classic themes - isolation; superstition; persecution and abuse; a hushed, defiant strain of feminism; the stigma attached to femininity when a female-coded person lives a life that in any way runs counter to social norms, "earning" a label as a witch; the strain of the pressure of all such converging ideas, and the effect it can have.
These are the aspects of 'Hagazussa' that immediately impress even within minutes of it beginning, along with great consideration for hair and makeup, and meticulous writing and orchestration of scenes. Filmmaker Lukas Feigelfeld's screenplay is exquisite, and his eye and guiding hand as director no less so. Every line of dialogue, every movement, every little detail on-screen - every shot - feels whole and precise, as though perfectly matching his vision. The movie gives the notion of an art film as much as an exploration of horror concepts; nary a frame would look out of place hanging on a wall. And I absolutely love it.
Dialogue is sparing but fruitful; characters are complex and varied. Each excellent passing scene is woven carefully into a narrative at once tight and freely flowing - and consciously, forcefully restrained, allowing the quietly unsettling course of events to manifest on their own time and speak for themselves without embellishment. Everyone in the cast is highly noteworthy as they bring this pointedly muted tableau to life, but Aleksandra Cwen above all gives an exceptional display of acting skill as protagonist Albrun. As the forlorn woman's circumstances grow increasingly harried and dire, Cwen embraces the character with terrific nuance, soft but discrete presence and physicality, and strength of personality. It's a pleasure to watch her demonstrate her capabilities, and I hope to see more of her in the future.
'Hagazussa' is in every way an extraordinary film. Even while exploring familiar ideas of the genre, it approaches it with a refined, scrutinizing lens. While we get distinctly jarring, disturbing moments, the realization of horror here is less acute and concrete than it is thematic and conceptual. This tack is echoed in the deliberate, mindful, attentive, painstaking craftsmanship that brings the picture to fruition. I'm utterly blown away: I had no foreknowledge or expectations when I began watching, but this is a remarkable, first-rate movie, a masterpiece that came and went in 2017 with far too little attention. Lukas Feigelfeld, Aleksandra Cwen, MMMD, and everyone else involved in the production deserve much great recognition, as does the film itself: 'Hagazussa' is a wonderful, absorbing, captivating, disquieting exemplar, a paragon of horror and cinematic film-making and storytelling, and I enthusiastically proclaim it's a must-see.
Highest possible recommendation! Bravo!
Plot summary
The dark legend of the young woman Albrun and her struggle to preserve her own sanity, and tries to explore the fine line between ancient magic, faith and madness at a time when pagan beliefs in witches and nature spirits spread fear and terror in the minds of the rural population.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Movie Reviews
An exemplar of artful horror
Trip
What a trip. It's tough to judge or rate movies like this. I can see how some will cherish this as masterpiece, while the majority will just be annoyed and think this is one of the worst things they've watched. It's a very fine line and I'm not entirely sure it is being walked on with grace or subtlety for that matter.
It's in black and white and it's mysterious to say the least. You have cryptic messages and you have characters (re)acting very weird. It is supposed to leave almost everything open to interpretation, it is also supposed to scare you at times. Also if it matters to you, one way or the other, the movie has nudity in it. Not in an exciting way mind you, and also there is psychological and some physical violence in it too. And it also messes with your mind ... maybe you can make sense of it, maybe you'll watch it again, to discover new things ... or maybe you will just shut it off after a couple of minutes ...
Wanted to Like It
DVD cover photo of skull is misleading (unless I missed the symbolism). Positive: Lots of scenes of a nice old cabin & woods & fields. Negative: If trying to convey religious superstition; loneliness; eventual loss of sanity, it didn't quite do it for some reason. Confusing: How did she become pregnant?