Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

Gretel & Hansel

Gretel & Hansel Review
2020
6
Director: 
Oz Perkins

SYNOPSIS: 

A long time ago in a distant fairy tale countryside, a young girl leads her little brother into a dark wood in desperate search of food and work, only to stumble upon a nexus of terrifying evil.

REVIEW: 

Anyone familiar with the original versions of classic fairy tales like “Hansel and Gretel” already knows that they have lots of horror movie potential. As a rule though, most attempts to capture these tales on film tend to miss the mark. It’s clear from the conspicuous reversal of the titular names that Gretel & Hansel hopes to distinguish itself from the rest of the pack right from the get-go, but does it actually do the job, or are you better off spending 90 minutes of your time on some other film?

Gretel & Hansel is the brainchild of writer/director Oz Perkins (The Blackcoat’s Daughter, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House). It stars Sophia Lillis and Sam Leakey as the famous fairy tale siblings, as well as Charles Babalola, Alice Krige, and Jessica De Gouw in supporting roles.

The plotline of the film follows the story progression of the original fairy tale well enough to feel familiar to viewers, but not so much that it’s completely predictable. Gretel (Lillis) is sixteen years old while her brother (Leakey) is much younger, so it’s clear from the start that she’s meant to be the heroine. The siblings wind up alone when their father dies and their mother slips into madness, leaving them to fend for themselves in the big, bad world out there.

Eventually, their travels and misadventures lead them to a mysterious house in the woods where a lavish feast has been laid out for unknown reasons. The house turns out to be the home of an eccentric woman named Holda (Krige). Outwardly, Holda appears to want to help the siblings, but it soon becomes clear that her intentions are much more nefarious, as those familiar with the fairy tale will be expecting.

Gretel & Hansel certainly has the lush, appealing visuals down pat. This is a good-looking movie that feels visually worthy of its fairy tale origins. Unusual compositions and creative camera work do an excellent job of conveying the confusion and disorientation the siblings must feel as they face their challenges. A haunting soundtrack by Rob adds to the effect and underscores the general feeling of dreamlike dread that permeates the film.

There’s also a very deliberate mixture of old-fashioned and modern touches sprinkled throughout which adds to the appeal of the film. Sophia Lillis and Alice Krige turn in excellent performances as Gretel and Holda respectively as well. Lillis in particular keeps the viewer captivated with her expressive eyes and quietly intense way of delivering her lines.

As intriguing and promising as Gretel & Hansel is though, it suffers from weak points that keep it from reaching its full potential. To begin with, the pacing doesn’t quite hit the mark. Perkins does a terrific job of creating an atmosphere, but then never quite makes any progress with it. There’s a start-and-stall quality to the film for this reason, and it never quite delivers on the thematic richness it seems to promise. There’s also a surprising amount of gore and grimness to Gretel & Hansel for a PG-13 film, even when you consider how very violent the original Grimm’s fairy tale was.

In other words, Gretel & Hansel doesn’t quite have the polish it could have had, nor does it quite know what it wants to say as far as its underlying message. However, it’s still well worth seeing so long as you’re willing to take it for what it is. It most certainly comes closer than many of its predecessors when it comes to adapting a time-honored fairy tale into a horror film.

SIMILAR MOVIES REVIEWS

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

Let the Right One In

Let the Right One In

2008

As Let the Right One In opens in a suburb of Stockholm during the 1980s, 12-year old Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant) shows all the signs of being on the road to turning into a Columbine killer. He's a loner who is relentlessly bullied at school. His parents, who are divorced, pay him only as much attention as they can fit into their busy schedules. And his hobby is cutting out articles about murders from the local paper and pasting them into a scrapbook. This is not normal behavior even for a socially awkward boy on the cusp of adolescence. But then things take an... Read More

The Atticus Institute movie

The Atticus Institute

2015

Dr Henry West (William Mapother) is the cheif researcher of the Atticus Institute, a small group dedicated to the investigation of psychic phenomena during the mid 1970s.  In 1976 a middle aged woman named Judith Winstead (Rya Kihlstedt) is delivered into their care, as she exhibits an extraordinary level of strange abilities. Nearly 40 years later, the true story of what happened is recounted by those involved.  It seems as if Judith was more than simply psychic: she was a conduit for something far more malevolent…. The Atticus Institute was written and... Read More

The Blair Witch Project

The Blair Witch Project

1999

The Horror! The Horror! It's everywhere this summer. Look at the fear on the face of gorgeous Catherine Zeta-Jones in The Haunting, a $75 million scarefest from Twister director Jan De Bont in which Zeta-Jones' lesbian designs on Lili Taylor pale next to the hideous designs that a haunted New England mansion has on both of them. Or check out The Deep Blue Sea, with Cliff-hanger director Renny Harlin pulling every trick an $80 million budget can buy to put Samuel L. Jackson, Thomas Jane and Saffron Burrows at the mercy of merciless, supersize sharks. Screenwriter David E.... Read More

Clown the movie

Clown

2014

Hating clowns is pretty much a religious observance in Western culture. No one really needs to explain, ‘I hate clowns’, and no one ever seems to be indifferent to them, let alone like the things, save for women of a certain age who are into naff figurines; it’s weird, though, that so many people have an opinion on something they haven’t ever seen first-hand in their original environment. I don’t know many people who’ve even been to the circus or ever had clowns turn up to entertain them at parties, or if they have, it’s certainly not frequent and/or traumatic enough to... Read More

Breaking at The Edge

Breaking at The Edge

2013

Breaking at the Edge is a 2013 horror film that’s actually more creepy than scary. Two brothers kill their half sister in order to inherit their wealthy estranged father’s estate.  And when the younger brother’s pregnant wife finds out, they plot to kill her too. 2 out of 10 stars.  What I didn’t like was the truly bad acting by the Brazilian actress and the “ghost” of Sara Randolph.  We’ve come a lot further than this.  The rest of the cast wasn’t much better.  Bad casting can really ruin a film. Ian and Bianca Wood are expecting a baby.... Read More