Witches of Blackwood (2021) by Kate Whitbread


Director: Kate Whitbread
Year: 2021
Country: Australia
Alternate Titles: The Unlit
Genre: Witchcraft

Plot:
Following her mother’s death, a young woman returns to her hometown to help put everything together only to find the town has become enshrouded in a mysterious darkness caused by a soul-eating entity that comes into play as a result of a coven of witches in the area and must find a way to stop their plans.

Review:

Overall, this was a pretty decent enough genre effort. Among the more enjoyable features here is the engaging setup that manages to get this one going quite nicely. The initial stages of this one, featuring the series of incidents happening in the village while focusing on her own tormented past and grief over her mother’s loss has a nice air to this one which manages to get explored nicely the longer she stays there. Not only does this occur with the uncovering of the mystery surrounding the events in the village but also the hints of witchcraft that are sprinkled throughout, from the shots of the coven at work to the written clues left behind by her mother that she discovers, all coming together into a fun time overall.

On top of this great setup, there’s a lot like here involving the action on display in the second half. With the early shots of the witches running around in the town giving the point across about their presence, the series of strange encounters involving the women acting strangely around the town, and then meeting up with the coven leader and the fate of her mother, there’s enough of a setup that the third act moves into a fun direction when the reveal of the coven and their intentions come about for a lot to like here. Since this sets up the film’s only real sense of action in the forest which is quite exciting in the discovery of what happened while preparing for the few showdowns that take place here that give this one a decent enough time.

There are some flaws to be had with this one. The first issue here is that, for a film as short as this one is, there’s not a lot in terms of action for most of the first half. Rather, this one spends a lot of time featuring her wandering around the town confronting weird people but not actually doing anything all that interesting or enjoyable. While all of this does set up the resulting reveal of the witches in control of the town and their influence over people, the sluggish way it goes about this doesn’t endear the film at the very beginning with it lasting way past the halfway point before they even uncover anything. That also highlights how ineffective the coven actually is, just influencing others in their spells and featuring a lack of any real blood and gore which all hold this one down.


Overview: **.5/5
An enjoyable enough time that does have some big issues throughout here, this one is basically nothing more than a worthwhile timewaster but isn’t anything more than that. Give this a shot if these kinds of indie efforts are appealing or intriguing to you, but most others should only heed caution with this instead.

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