Prošle godine bila je stogodišnjica od premijere jednog od najvažnijih i najuticajnijih hororičnih klasika nemog filma, švedske VEŠTICE (Haxan). Pisao sam o tom delu opširno u mojoj studiji o Đavolu na filmu FAUSTOVSKI EKRAN (2006), a pisao sam, ponovo (ali sasvim drugo, drugim rečima, iz drugog ugla), prošle godine, i za najbolji svetski horor magazin, RUE MORGUE.
Malo niže, ekskluzivno na ovom blogu, sada možete pročitati taj tekst, ako ga niste u MRTVAČKOJ ULICI.
Inače, ovaj
moj tekst nominovan je nedavno za uglednu nagradu, Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award, u kategoriji NAJBOLJI ČLANAK (BEST ARTICLE).
Dakle,
pročitajte ga, pa ako vam se svidi, a i ako ne, GLASAJTE ZA MENE – jer ovo je
nagrada koju dodeljuje NAROD!
Vrlo
je jednostavna procedura – objasniću je sasvim ispod, posle članka.
Ali prvo, evo tog članka, originalno pisanog za RUE MORGUE #205.
Benjamin Christensen’s Hӓxan, the
film which cast its spell a hundred years ago, still works its dark magic
HEX OF THE CENTURY
Dejan Ognjanović
A century ago the art of cinema was still young, but becoming ever more conscious of its possibilities. Visionary artists had a fresh, powerful tool at their disposal to paint with, and they used moving images and flickering interplays between the light and the dark to portray new, unseen worlds. Some of Europe’s greatest filmmakers of the time, though unrelated to one another, and without a conscious intention to do so, actually brought the nascent horror cinema to adulthood by defining the basics of its language. It was achieved through four masterpieces which premiered within two years from one another. Three of them were German. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) exemplified the ability of cinema to depict the distorted, irrational world of nightmares. Golem (1920) embodied the possibilities of expressionistic painting with darkness and shadows which served as a visual (but also thematic) template for later Universal’s horrors, starting with Frankenstein (1931). Then came Nosferatu (Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens, 1922) which spread the stylized studio-shot horrors into the real-world’s exteriors of forests, castles, mountains and seas. Finally, 1922 also brought a film as accomplished and important, yet in many ways apart from the above – Hӓxan, also known as Witchcraft Through the Ages.
By any name it is a powerful piece of cinema with a lasting legacy. Its rerelease in 1941 was accompanied by William Sieverts’s book Witchcraft and Superstition Through the Times. In 1968 it was reedited by Antony Balch into a version featuring jazz score and narration by the cult author William S. Burroughs. In 1999 the makers of The Blair Witch Project named their production company after it – Haxan Films. The Norwegian black metal band Mayhem used a frame from Hӓxan depicting Devil for the cover of their 2004 album Chimera…
What is it that makes this film still relevant a full century later?
Simply put, it was and remains revolutionary in at least three major respects.
Documentary Horror
First of all, Hӓxan was an early, pioneering mixture of horror and documentary. Conceived as a cultural-historic lecture on the dangers of delusions, it used moving images to describe the gruesome persecution of witches and the causes behind it, such as the belief in demons and devils, but also stressed the psychological factors behind it all. Yes, the prologue, about world-wide demonologies, may be too general for today’s audiences (though they can spy some familiar faces there, like Pazuzu), and truly, the epilogue about modern-day neuroses dated poorly and was rightfully criticized even upon the premiere, but those odds and ends are easily overshadowed by the film’s real meat – its large middle portion, which depicts the medieval superstitions attendant to the witches and how they were dealt with by the officials of the gynocidal society.
The horrors in this concept are twofold: on one hand, the supernatural frights evoked by the flying witches, Sabbaths and devils, and on the other, the very real, historically attested terrors of torture at the Inquisition. Hӓxan is a “documentary” which obeys the rule of “Show, don’t tell!” And so, it visualizes both types of horror – surprisingly, with equal success.
Those re-enactments are where the real drama and real cinema reside: folk magic, strange broths, animal skeletons, human body parts used together with snakes and frogs for magic potions, the hexing power of urine (!) and so much more, all of it derived from Christensen’s research into the old books on demonology, like the notorious 1487 Inquisitors manual Malleus Malleficarum (Hammer of the Witches), his main source, which, one should note, was not available at the time in mass-market annotated paperbacks, like it is today.
In his aim to be as realistic and authentic as possible, the director was aided by the prop master, Richard Louw, who created the sets and torture instruments based on the medieval designs. There is no need to see them in action, as they strike the unfortunate flesh: the very sight of many of those sharp, spiky screws and pliers is enough to send chills down one’s spine (but modern audiences will remember seeing some of these items applied in Ken Russell’s The Devils, 1971). Also, the investment in a new studio was a risky bet, largely responsible for making this the most expensive film made at the time in any Scandinavian country, but it paid off in spades because the meticulous high contrast lighting and photographic effects created by the DP, Johan Ankerstjerne, surpassed all that Hollywood’s expensive bells and whistles could achieve at the time. Thanks to Christensen’s obsessive, perfectionist attention to detail, Hӓxan remains a first-rate visual feast in all its aspects, whether realistic or phantasmagoric.
Highlights among the latter include innovative visual effects of dozens of witches on broomsticks flying above the village to consort with the Devil, and the actual Black Sabbath which includes grotesque demons in convincing full-body costumes, masks and highly effective prosthetic facial make-up for their leering close-ups. The shocking details in this sequence ranged from female nudity (no longer shocking today) through blasphemous acts like trampling and spitting on the cross and kissing Satan’s behind (which many would find offensive even in this day and age) all the way to that evergreen shocker, a newborn slaughter. Yes, of course the baby bleeding above the steaming cauldron was a puppet, just like it was in A Serbian Film ninety years later, but tell that to the appalled audiences lulled by the apparent realism preceding it.
If it were merely a documentary on witchcraft, Hӓxan might’ve remained a forgotten title, known only to a select few fanatics. Its effectiveness, however, is rooted in the fantastic scenes of the Sabbath, and even more – in the palpable atmosphere of superstition and dark forces at work, even when invisible. Especially when invisible. Christensen created a realistic setting through minute set-design, props and costumes which are surrounding good actors and their characters’ plausible motivations, resulting in a mise-en-scène in which forces of evil can be expected to rise from the shadows at any moment. The sense of an all-pervading paranoia is palpable. These were indeed the Dark Ages, and the director clearly shows why.
Sympathy for the
Devil
The second revolutionary aspect of Hӓxan worth stressing is its portrayal of the Devil, depicted here as ambiguous and even sympathetic.
In terms of iconography, the Devil appears with small horns and big, pointed ears, his face and body recognizably humanoid, a long tongue protruding lasciviously from his mouth. Basically, he is the pagan Pan as demonized by the Christians: a deity of carnal pleasures. He is a tempter and a seducer, and all the sins that he instigates in this film have to do with sexuality: a woman buys a love potion from another in order to seduce a friar, a novice is tormented by visions of a young woman in his monastic cell, not to mention the Sabbath’s orgiastic abandon. Devil, as seen here, is hardly supernatural: he is all too natural, arising as he does from the body’s basic instincts. As Pinhead would say, “There is no Good, there is no Evil; there is only Flesh”.
At least two aspects of Hӓxan’s Devil make him different and special.
Firstly, the Devil is treated as a metaphor, not a power actually existing outside of humans and their interrelations. This is most obvious in the fact that the entire Black Sabbath sequence is presented as a “confession” of a clearly innocent old woman, extracted under torture. All the wildly memorable images of Hӓxan’s most celebrated sequence are coming from a frightened person who is telling her tormentors what they want to hear. The film is critical towards the medieval superstition and ignorance, and makes a point of showing the use of potions and ointments as another possible source of “visions” attributed to the Devil. At one point the crone confesses that her frail old body allegedly gave birth to a host of demons: Christensen shows two grotesque imps (probably children in full-body costumes) crawling from underneath her skirts. It is as if he is saying: if you could believe this, you could believe anything.
Secondly, and more subtly, this film’s sympathy for the Devil is expressed in the fact that he is played by none other than by Benjamin Christensen himself. And quite memorably so. His sudden appearance, from pitch-blackness, behind a book that an abbot is reading, must be one of the most effective jump-scares of all times. He is lewd, he is playful, provocative, he is the master-entertainer. He is the one that guarantees ticket sales, not the pious priests – none of whom are to be seen in this anticlerical film anyway. And our master of ceremonies, our Director, clearly embraces the exploitation behind his lectures and entertainment behind his sermons, identifying with the archetypal rebel and admitting, as William Blake did writing about Milton, with his meta-cinematic wink, that all artists are “of the Devil’s party”.
Sympathy for the Witch
Unlike many of his contemporaries, like the scholar Montague Summers or author H. P. Lovecraft, the director of Hӓxan did not buy any of the nonsense extracted under torture and verified as a “fact” by the torturers. In his enlightened, positivist perspective, quite rare among the filmmakers in the early 1920s, the witches were not perpetrators of evil, but clearly victims: sometimes of their own faults and delusions, even more often of other people’s malevolence. Predating Michael Reeves’s Witchfinder General (1968) for almost half a century, Christensen realistically depicts all the phases, from a false accusation, through sadistic torture to execution. Furthermore, he makes the unfortunate woman’s plight even more touching by casting an old lady, non-actor, but with a highly expressive face, in the role of the “witch”. He refused to exploit the sadistic spectacle of a nubile young woman’s torture that many others would cash-in on later (e.g. Mark of the Devil, 1970) and for his trial selected a person who could not possibly be guilty of anything.
As it happens so often with filmmakers dealing with extreme, explicit imagery, his agenda was not immediately recognized, and like Deodato and Spasojević much later, Christensen was accused of advocating that which he seemingly condemned. The daily paper Social Demokraten wrote after Hӓxan’s premiere: “Many of the images exude such raw realism that the dominating reaction is one of nausea. The viewer suffers the torments along with the victims on the screen. The film seems itself a product of the beastliness, torture, bonfires and insanity that it means to critique.” Basically, the film was condemned for being too powerful, that is – too cinematic. Its images were too strong. This caused it many troubles. In English-speaking countries no one dared show the film for many years. The New York Times at least recognized that the film was ahead of its time when they wrote: “Come back with your film in 25 years, Mr. Christensen, and maybe then America will be mature enough to understand your art.”
“After The Witch,” Christensen would recall, “I was out in the cold for two years. When I finally got a chance at UFA, I had to disprove that I was this ‘literary experimentalist’ that everybody said I was, and so I made these purely commercial films.” While Hӓxan did not actually put an end to his career the way that, say, Peeping Tom (1960) would do to Michael Powell, its director was relegated to conventional films, now rightly forgotten, a partial exception being his decent Hollywood-made horror thriller Seven Footprints to Satan (1929). However, the power of The Witch was not repeated. But making even one film that is so incomparably unlike any other is more than most directors can dream of.
“It is a state of bliss,” admitted Benjamin Christensen, “for an artist once in his lifetime to get permission to do what he wants. That happened with The Witch.”
* * *
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