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Clip Photos Top cast Edit. Frances Conroy Dr. Moss as Dr. Sophie Hough Daisy as Daisy. David Purvis Ivy as Ivy. Neil LaBute. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Some Sacrifices Must Be Made. Rated PG for disturbing images and violence, language and thematic issues.

Did you know Edit. Trivia Robin Hardy , a writer and the director of the original film, and Christopher Lee , who played Summerisle in the original film, were both critical of the remake.

Hardy had his name removed from the film's credits as he did not wish to be associated with it. Goofs Why did the women kill the pilot? He did what he needed to do, get Malus safe to the island.

The camera works well with him too, showing us the often bizarre practices of the island and then his reactions. On repeated viewings, you start to untangle the dynamic of his personality and the intricacies of the conspiracy. But The Wicker Man plays with reality.

We go away from Britain of the s only to return to it, reimagined. The corner shop, the pub, the people and their costumes — they all look much as they should and yet also somehow different.

It reminds me of the Cornwall village where I grew up and a witchy forgotten past that seeps through our culture despite many attempts to stop it. Top cast Edit. Britt Ekland Willow as Willow. Ingrid Pitt Librarian as Librarian. Ian Campbell Oak as Oak. Leslie Blackater Hairdresser as Hairdresser. Roy Boyd Broome as Broome. Peter Brewis Musician as Musician.

Ross Campbell Communicant as Communicant. Penny Cluer Gillie as Gillie. Robin Hardy. Anthony Shaffer screenplay David Pinner novel "Ritual" uncredited. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. He is there to follow up on a letter addressed specifically to him from an anonymous source on Summerisle reporting that a twelve year old girl who lives on the island, Rowan Morrison, the daughter of May Morrison, has long been missing. The correspondence includes a photograph of Rowan.

Upon his arrival on Summerisle, Howie finds that the locals are a seemingly simple minded lot who provide little information beyond the fact that they know of no Rowan Morrison and do not know the girl in the photo.

Morrison admits to having a daughter, seven year old Myrtle, but no Rowan. As Howie speaks to more and more people, he begins to believe that Rowan does or did live on the island, but that the locals are hiding their knowledge of her. He also begins to see that the locals all have pagan beliefs, their "religion" which centers on procreation as the source of life.

That procreation does not necessarily need to be within marriage, and openly flaunts the act of sex, both in private and in public. These beliefs do not sit well against Howie's strict Christian morals, he who regularly attends church, prays, and accepts communion. Everything that happens on the island seems to be dictated by Lord Summerisle, whose ancestors bought the island generations ago. Howie begins to believe that Rowan was murdered, she a sacrifice by the islanders to their higher power to ensure a bountiful apple crop - the main crop of the island - which did not materialize last season.

The movie was an oddball horror called The Wicker Man. It was about a puritanical policeman Edward Woodward who travels to a remote and entirely fictional Scottish island in the Hebrides to investigate the case of a missing child. The Wicker Man looms as among the most influential British films of the past 50 years. Another reminder of its significance arrives tomorrow with new Sky Atlantic series The Third Day , set on an island off the British coast where pre-Christian gods are worshipped and things go bump in the night and during the day.

There have been many copycats, and a disastrous American remake with Nicholas Cage. But nothing since has rivalled its giddy, almost twee, otherworldliness. For a horror film, it breaks all the rules. There is singing, choreography and — in a later cut — footage of snails engaged in a mating dance. Even in , when the last vestiges of the hippy dream lingered, this was all deeply bonkers.

Unsurprisingly, more than a few of those entangled in the project were convinced they were headed for disaster. Plastic apple blossom trees had to be procured to conceal the fact a film ostensibly set in spring was being shot in deepest November. Its biggest star, Britt Ekland, hated every moment on set. And if you cheat and lie to people, it creates ill feeling all around. That enthusiasm never flagged. In the summer of , he paid his own way to travel to America to publicise the US release.

The Wicker Man would leave him significantly out of pocket. But it casts a shadow not simply as a great Seventies horror flick. Loosely defined, Hauntology is a nostalgia for the half-remembered ephemera of the Sixties and Seventies.



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