The Witch
The Witch
The Witch
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The Witch
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Volume 25 Article 64
Issue 1 April 2021
March 2021
The Witch
Paul O'Connor
University of Exeter, p.j.oconnor@exeter.ac.uk
Recommended Citation
O'Connor, Paul (2021) "The Witch," Journal of Religion & Film: Vol. 25 : Iss. 1 , Article 64.
Available at: https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/jrf/vol25/iss1/64
Abstract
This is a book review of Brandon Grafius, The Witch (Devil’s Advocates) (Liverpool, UK: Auteur Publishing
in partnership with Liverpool University Press, 2020).
Author Notes
Paul O’Connor is a lecturer in Sociology at the The University of Exeter. His research focuses on the
sociology of religion, ethnicity, and lifestyle sports. He is the author of the books Skateboarding and
Religion (2020) and Islam in Hong Kong (2012).
In 2015 Robert Eggers walked away from the Sundance Film Festival with the
best director award and a prized distribution deal for his debut feature The
Witch. As a horror film it was an unusual choice for the festival, but then again
it was an unusual addition to the genre: a period piece set in 17th century New
England with meticulous attention to its era in both costume design and
dialogue. The potent religious content is readily apparent to even the most
disinterested viewer and permeates the entire film. Despite this period detail,
The Witch has proven to be influential as part of a nascent subgenre some have
termed ‘elevated horror,’ akin to titles such as Get Out (2017), Hereditary
(2018), and The Perfection (2018). Audience responses to The Witch have been
divided with many nonplussed by its slow pace and surprising conclusion. It has
however developed a cult following with at least one line of dialogue, “would
Brandon Grafius’s text on the The Witch is the first in depth exploration
sacred themes. However, for scholars of religion and film, Grafius’s work is
effective in addressing and unpacking the potent religious content and context
of the film. The triumph of the text is that it succeeds in being both accessible
and a close reading of the film. The text would work well in courses on religion
The book begins with Grafius exploring his own relationship with The
Witch. We learn about how the film has captured his imagination and demanded
his repeated viewing. He is clearly a fan and invests time unpacking the way in
which Eggers has crafted his message. Conceptually, Grafius draws on The
feminist message in The Witch, the potency of a woman’s laughter and joy set
aside the fragility of the male ego. This is an idea that Grafius returns to on
are provided with a synopsis of an English Puritan family banished from their
The key characters are introduced, Thomasin, the eldest daughter of William
and Katherine, their four younger children Caleb, Mercy, Jonas, and Samuel,
chapter focuses on Puritan religion and its historical place in New England. Here
context in which the Puritan movement evolved. The key details about Puritans
in New England, Anne Hutchinson, and the Salem witch trials are all neatly
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O'Connor: The Witch
interwoven. The real skill with this part of the book is that the context always
feels relevant to the film. Those who are quite familiar with the Puritan
movement in New England will appreciate revisiting the content of this chapter
A key contribution of the text is the way in which Grafius places The
Witch in the field of genre. The author explores the literary context of genre and
adopts Mikhail Bakhtin’s argument that genre is about worldview rather than
dismiss the placement of The Witch in the emergent genres of ‘art house’ or
‘elevated’ horror. He convincingly asserts that folk horror is the most relevant
and applicable worldview that the film can be discussed within. The key tenets
potent or exaggerated moral views, and a summoning of sorts. These are taken
from Scovell’s (2017) recent work on Folk Horror. In clarifying the traits of the
genre Grafius discusses both British and American folk horror and then zeros
in on New England folk horror in the guise of The Devil and Daniel Webster
(1941). He further unveils folk horror in a discussion of the seminal faux “found
footage” film, The Blair Witch Project (1999). Here Grafius does a remarkable
job of tying these folk horror films together and highlighting what makes them
work. The natural elements of an imposing and austere landscape are present in
these films, and play on what Cowan (2008) discusses as the sociophobics of
horror. Yet, Grafius stops short of making broader connections to the work on
religion and horror films. His discussion is more squarely on the elements of
folk horror. He notes that in these films the malevolent force is seldom purely
an external presence, but always closer to home, the family, tradition, and the
their placement in the notion of original sin, and the bond between witches and
their animal familiars. All of these elements are directly relevant to the film and
placing The Witch in the religious context of 17th century New England
discusses both religious history and the horror genre with aplomb, but rarely
One feature of the text that must be applauded was the close attention to
each character. I was most impressed and grateful for the analysis of Caleb. The
examined and tied to the real life 1662 death of eight-year-old Elizabeth Kelly
by the final wails of Kelly and her fevered expressions in which she believed
Grafius makes throughout this chapter are the result of the fine and detailed
exposition earlier in the text. We are able to comprehend fully the interplay of
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O'Connor: The Witch
17th century understandings of the devil in the guise of Black Phillip, and the
sympathetic way and her pact with the Devil is made only when she is
abandoned and turned upon by her parents. She has little other choice, yet her
comfort and joy which we believe she has been craving. This is set in stark
contrast to the patriarchal authority of both her father William, and that of her
Puritan faith which seeks to reduce her femininity and her role in the world at
large. Grafius highlights that witches have been a metaphor for problematic
anomaly, ‘matter out of place’ (Douglas 1969). In the film, the social role of the
witch becomes a source of power outside of the confines of this narrow and
misogynistic worldview.
In the concluding chapter, Grafius expands his focus and reflects on the
William is easy to admire in his commitment to his beliefs, while also noting
that in the 21st century Puritan fears and anxieties are also close at hand. Here
he focuses on capitalism as a religion in itself, and one that has failed to deliver
its promises. For Grafius this disaffection has in part resulted in reactionary
populist movements notable in the West and across the globe. He returns to the
ending of the film and posits a question: Are we subject to the same fate as
all of its material promises? Grafius’s conclusion is bleak, to say the least. It
may also be a limited and constrained way to read the film’s ending.
placing it both within an established historical religious context and genre field.
The book is enjoyable and accessible even to those who have not watched the
film. From a religious studies perspective the real contribution is the suturing of
the religious history with folk horror. Here the research and writing of Grafius
simply mirrors that of Eggers. Both have invested in understanding 17th century
New England Puritanism in an effort to make the very most of the narrative of
The Witch.
that I harbour. The first complaint I have is also the shallowest. The book is
brief, at only 100 pages: it teases ideas that could be explored in much greater
detail. I realize that this is in itself a “straw man” argument in that the Devil’s
Advocates books are designed for both academic readers and film fans alike.
Secondly, I felt that on several occasions the feminist critique that Grafius was
developing was a little misplaced. He reveals that initially he felt William was
the key protagonist of the film, while I would argue that it is always Thomasin
who is placed centrally in the narrative. He also claims that Thomasin is the
ideal Puritan daughter. Yet, the film deliberately makes her position ambiguous.
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O'Connor: The Witch
We spend much of the film wondering if she really is the witch that disappeared
Samuel, and her taunting of Mercy only heightens her possible dual nature. In
conclusion, when her innocence in uncontested, it is ironic that her release from
the Puritan family disaster is again orchestrated by a patriarch, this time in the
My biggest criticism of the book is that it fails to read The Witch as part
culture this could be linked back to the 1990s in both the film and TV offering
of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. More importantly, though, it is relevant to the rise
Thomasin joins the witches’ coven fits with the positive reproduction of
witchcraft and magic in social media in recent years. This fusion of witchcraft
both anxious and censorious about the actions and beliefs of others. However,
this pop culture embrace of witchcraft also leads to a different reading of the
conclusion, as Thomasin’s signing of the book may be read as no more evil than
her submission to Puritan ideals. In light of new social movements and a new
References
Cowan, Douglas E. 2008. Sacred Terror: Religion and Horror on the Silver Screen. Waco,
Texas: Baylor University Press.
Douglas, Mary. 1969. Purity and danger : an analysis of concepts of pollution and taboo. 2nd
impression with corrections. ed. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Scovell, A. 2017. Folk Horror: Hours of Dreadful and Strange Things. Leighton Buzzard:
Auteur.
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