When Mother Malkin, the queen of
evil witches, escapes the pit she was imprisoned in by professional monster
hunter Spook decades ago and kills his apprentice, he recruits young Tom, the
seventh son of the seventh son, to help him.
Director: Sergey Bodrov (as
Sergei Bodrov)
Writers: Charles Leavitt
(screenplay), Steven Knight (screenplay)
Stars: Ben Barnes, Julianne
Moore, Jeff Bridges
Seventh Son |
Storyline
John Gregory, who is a seventh
son of a seventh son and also the local spook, has protected his country from
witches, boggarts, ghouls and all manner of things that go bump in the night.
However John is not young anymore, and has been seeking an apprentice to carry
on his trade. Most have failed to survive. The last hope is a young farmer's
son named Thomas Ward. Will he survive the training to become the spook that so
many others couldn't? Should he trust the girl with pointy shoes? How can
Thomas stand a chance against Mother Malkin, the most dangerous witch in the
county?
Seventh Son |
User Reviews
Set in medieval times in Europe
somewhere, "Seventh Son" brings us back to a time when supernatural
beings like witches, ghosts, ghasts and the like wreak terror on the
countryside. The people depend on a special knight called the "Spook"
to fight these creatures and restore peace.
Master Gregory is the last spook
and he is getting on in age. In his last big fight with the grand witch Mother
Malkin, he lost his latest apprentice Billy. Gregory searches for another
"seventh son of a seventh son" to take his place.
His quest leads him to the farm
of the Wards. As the young impulsive Tom heeds the Spook's call, will he be up
to the task of becoming the new Spook before Mother Malkin fully regains her
powers by the night of the blood moon? Or will Tom's falling for the charms of
pretty Alice distract him from his destiny?
Cut down to its basic storyline,
you would see a very common basic plot in many an adventure film: an old master
training an heir-apparent to his position. This film takes that plot and brings
into it fantastic monsters in action and teenage romance in bloom.
Ben Barnes plays Tom Ward. Barnes
first gained attention as Prince Caspian in the Narnia films, though his career
did not really fly too much. He takes another stab at stardom with yet another
action fantasy with this one. Already a adult man, Barnes seemed too old for
the character he is supposed to play. Anyhow, he still has a youthful mien to
pull it off. I think he was cast so that a romance angle can be developed as
well.
Jeff Bridges plays Master
Gregory. He is at his hammy best here and he looks like he had a good time
filming this. In fact, Bridges felt like he just reprised his role in last
year's "RIPD", where he was a senior ghost policeman training a new
recruit. Bridges had some witty ripostes which added the requisite humor to the
proceedings.
Julianne Moore goes all campy
playing Mother Malkin with evil relish and glee. She gets to wear more
witchy-chic than Maleficent and she seemed to be having a field day with this
over-the-top character, much unlike the more serious and quiet ones she is more
known for. In addition, she and her coven of powerful witches (played by Antje
Traue, Djimon Hounsou, Jason Scott Lee, among others) get to transform into
dragons and similarly fantastic beasts, thanks to neat and nifty computer-
generated special effects.
This film is based on the young
adult novel "The Spook's Apprentice" written by Joseph Delaney.
Unlike the atmospheric creepy book it was based on, the film is makes it more
of an action fantasy for cinematic verve. Tom and Alice in the book are both
pre-teens. The witch characters did not fit their descriptions in the book as
well. They did not turn into animals, for one. In fact, one of the side
characters, the deformed humanoid Tusk, even shifts over from evil in the book
to good in the film.
The visual effects were hit and
miss, some (like the creature transformations) were impressive and seamless,
but some (like the conflagrations) looked old-fashioned and garishly fake. Book
fans may be disappointed by the major deviations from the original tale. Those
who are unfamiliar with the book though will be entertained, but will
definitely feel that the story being told by director Sergey Bodrov follows a
tired and very familiar formula. 6/10.
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