Witch Hunt (1994 film)

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Witch Hunt
WitchHunt1994film.jpg
VHS cover
Genre
  • Crime
  • Fantasy
  • Mystery
Written by Joseph Dougherty
Directed by Paul Schrader
Starring
Music by Angelo Badalamenti
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Producers
Cinematography Jean-Yves Escoffier
Editor Kristina Boden
Running time100 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkHBO
ReleaseDecember 10, 1994 (1994-12-10)

Witch Hunt is a 1994 HBO fantasy detective television film directed by Paul Schrader and starring Dennis Hopper, [1] Penelope Ann Miller and Eric Bogosian. [2] The film, written by Joseph Dougherty, [3] is a sequel to the 1991 film Cast a Deadly Spell , with Hopper playing private detective H. Phillip Lovecraft and replacing Fred Ward. Additionally, many characters have different backstories than in Cast a Deadly Spell. For example, Lovecraft refuses to use magic in Cast a Deadly Spell on principle, but in Witch Hunt he refuses because of a bad experience which he has had. The original music score was composed by Angelo Badalamenti. [3]

Contents

Plot

In a fictionalized version of Los Angeles, magic is real, and mythical beasts exist. The year is 1953, some five years since magic was considered a normal thing. Senator Larson Crockett has led a campaign that managed to make the majority of the country afraid of magic and even outlaw its use.

Private investigator H. Philip Lovecraft is hired by film star Kim Hudson to dig up dirt on her husband, producer N.J. Gotlieb, who is about to replace her on his latest film with a young starlet with whom he may be having an affair. In secret, Hypolita Kropotkin, Lovecraft's friend and landlady, works for Gotlieb's film studio as a witch, bringing famous writers from history to help with the scripts.

Always beside Gotlieb is warlock Finn Macha, a former private investigator whom Lovecraft knows. When Crocket, Gotlieb and Macha leave the studio, Lovecraft follows them to a mansion in Los Feliz. Before he can learn what is going on in there, an enchanted raven makes him fall asleep with magic. When he wakes up the next morning, everybody seems to be gone.

At the studio, Gotlieb fires Kim, whom he feels only married him because of his wealth and power. Shortly after, Gotlieb is murdered by magic, and the main suspect is Kim. Distressed, she hires Lovecraft to find the killer and prove her innocence.

Lovecraft asks Hypolita for help. She, in turn, recruits two magic users from her coven. One of them, senses some of Gotlieb's old memories, which lead the group to a beachhouse. The house is owned by Gotlieb and someone used magic to clean it of all evidence. Lovecraft returns alone to the mansion where he was magically roofied. It turns out to be a whorehouse, where prostitutes use magic to turn into whatever each client wants.

Lovecraft then goes to talk to Kim. Without knowing, he interrupts a meeting between her and one of the mansion's sex workers. Startled by Lovecraft, the prostitute uses magic to steal Kim's car and flee. Later, that same woman is found in the river, dead and turned into a mannequin.

While going to see Kim again, Lovecraft saves her from committing suicide. She reveals she has been using a charm like the one the sex workers have to become more conventionally attractive and have a better shot at being a movie star. Lovecraft confesses he also used magic once: he did it to solve a crime and get evidence faster. However, a woman was killed as a result by none other than Macha.

Senator Crockett uses the recent murders to make Kropotkin a scapegoat in his Anti-Magic crusade. Thanks to newly passed Congressional legislation, he has her sentenced to public burning.

Lovecraft confronts Crockett, who brags about being behind the murders with Macha. Knowing one needs to have a cause to gain attention and political power and knowing he could not go against corporations, Crockett had decided to attack the magical community. Now a major candidate for president of the United States, Crockett orders the arrest of both Lovecraft and Macha (whom he no longer needs). Enraged at this double-cross, Macha puts a curse on Crockett.

Before he can set Hypolita on fire, Crockett starts spitting out frogs. Suddenly, his true inner self bursts out from inside his body, becoming shockingly sincere about his real intentions and his disdain for his supporters. During the ensuing chaos (in which both Crocketts are arrested), Lovecraft frees Hypolita and they escape, while Macha is nowhere to be found.

Lovecraft then goes to Kim's, but finds Macha instead. The warlock claims to have kidnapped her, wanting Lovecraft to join him. As an old foe of the detective, Macha knows Lovecraft has the potential to be a powerful warlock, and to tempt him into using magic Macha presents a threat: Kim will die if Lovecraft does not use magic to stop him. At the last moment, Hypolita sends her own magic through Lovecraft to incapacitate Macha. Taking advantage of this opportunity, Lovecraft kicks the fallen Macha off a balcony into the sea, where he drowns.

Content with not being a movie star anymore, Kim stops using magic to alter her appearance and decides to leave Hollywood. Before she boards the train, Lovecraft passionately kisses her goodbye. Later, back at his office building, Lovecraft muses on the final results of his investigation.

Cast

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References

  1. "Dennis Hopper filmography". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times . 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-11-10.
  2. "Eric Bogosian filmography". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times . 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-12-27.
  3. 1 2 "Witch Hunt credits". The New York Times .