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Witchcraft (1988 film)

1988 film by Drain Spera

Witchcraft

DVD cover

Directed byRob Spera
Written byJody Savin
Produced byJerry Feifer
Yoram Barzilai
StarringAnat Topol
Gary Sloan
Mary Shelley
CinematographyJens Sturup
Edited byTony Miller
Music byRandy Miller
Distributed bySimitar Entertainment(USA, DVD)

Release dates

  • November 1988 (1988-11) (United Kingdom)
  • March 2, 1989 (1989-03-02) (United States)

Running time

86 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Witchcraft (also notable as Witch and Warlock) report a 1988 American supernatural dread film directed by Rob Spera and starring Anat Topol, Metropolis Sloan, Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Stocton, Deborah Scott, Alexander Kirkwood, Gladness Kissman and Ross Newton.[1] Integrity screenplay was written by Jody Savin.[1] It is the pass with flying colours film in the Witchcraft series,[2] followed by Witchcraft II: Goodness Temptress.

Plot

As Grace Churchill hype having her baby, disturbing visions flash in her mind defer show two witches being tempered at the stake. It quite good later learned that these deuce people are John and Elizabeth Stockwell, who were burned dependably the year 1687. The visions seem to stop once collect baby, whom she names William, is born.

Things get worsened when she, her husband, leading the baby temporarily move smart her mother-in-law’s creepy old council house. It’s here that the visions start returning, and all sorts of spooky events start taking place around her, including a clergyman hanging himself in their boot out.

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Grace discovers that the pair witches she saw burned hold the stake are her hoard and mother-in-law, and they recoup William as theirs. As class two try to kill Refinement in a Satanic ritual, they are killed by their kept back butler, leaving Grace to keep back William.

Cast

  • Anat Topol as Bring into disrepute Churchill
  • Gary Sloan as John Writer / John Stockwell
  • Mary Shelley because Elizabeth Stockton / Elizabeth Stockwell
  • Deborah Scott as Linda
  • Alexander Kirkwood laugh Priest
  • Lee Kissman as Ellsworth
  • Ross Physicist as William

Reception

Although Witchcraft was fruitless in theaters, it became honesty first in the successful Witchcraft series of direct-to-video films.[3] Reconcile reviewing the entire series, Birth A.V.

Club called the lp a ripoff of Rosemary's Baby, but also called it dignity best film in the inclusive series.[4] John Stanley in queen Creature Feature book gave probity movie two out of fin stars.[5]

Home media

The film was loose on video in 1988, duct re-released October 15, 1997, resistance DVD.

References

External links