This film is screening is part of the Cinematic Jukebox season at the Prince Charles Cinema. You can find full details of the season here.
Time Out review:
All those sacrifices to the
cinema gods must have worked, because after a yearlong worldwide search,
the final cut of ‘The Wicker Man’ has been found. The thrill of seeing
the 1973 cult classic on the big screen is reason enough to drop
everything and go – but doubly so with this longer version, which deeply
enhances the film’s eerie pagan weirdness. That creepiness is what made distributors delete some of the film’s
most evocative scenes: a sermon at the start, the ‘Gently Johnny’ song
segment with snail-on-snail action and more of Christopher Lee’s
splendid Lord Summerisle. The print quality is variable and much of the ‘new’ material has
appeared on DVDs previously. Whole websites have been dedicated to
spotting the differences, so fans will keep debating about which version
is ‘definitive’. What an incredible treat, though, to see it all in one
place, in the cinema, as director Robin Hardy intended. ‘The Wicker
Man’, as a British classic, has it all: ‘Carry On’-style gags, a
haunting folk soundtrack, spectacular Scottish landscapes, Edward
Woodward’s stiff-upper-lip sense of duty, a critique of organised
religion and that still-harrowing ending.
Kathryn Bromwich
Here (and above) is the trailer.
Kathryn Bromwich
Here (and above) is the trailer.
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