The
Seventh Son is the bi-product of the success of the
Harry Potter films and the
Lord of the Rings trilogy as studios scramble to find a new successful franchise. So how do you make a new fantasy film series?
Well the first thing you need is a popular book series that has enough
entries to ensure several films. Do you need to actually follow the
source material? Of course not, getting the fans of the books pissed off
is half the fun! This movie is based on
The Spook's Apprentice by English author Joseph Delaney and is the first part of “
The Wardstone Chronicles”
and aside from name dropping the characters from the book this movie
bears little resemblance to the source material. Guaranteed sure fire
hit…right?
The film opens with Master Gregory (
Jeff Bridges), a knight of the order of Spooks, imprisoning the evil witch Mother Malkin (
Julianne Moore) inside a nasty pit. Now, both the movie and the North American release of the book
The Spook’s Apprentice
changed the title because of the derogatory historical nature of the
word spook but for some reason the filmmakers decided to keep the name
in the script which resulted in me cringing every time someone called
Jeff Bridges a spook.
“You’ll change everything else from the book but not that?”
We
flash forward a couple of decades to find Master Gregory getting drunk
at a local tavern but his libations are interrupted by his apprentice
Mr. Bradley (
Kit Harrington)
who informs his master that a young girl is possessed and needs their
help. Because Gregory is a drunken asshat he ignores his apprentice and
continues to drink. A soldier is offended by Gregory’s callous behavior
and tries to intervene but even drunk Gregory is a badass fighter and
completely humiliates the soldier. Just when we are wondering who is
supposed to be the hero of this film the church bells ring out which
apparently means that a spook is required and Gregory must answer the
call. So exactly what was the point of Gregory beating up a random
soldier whose sole crime was in wanting Gregory to do his bloody job?
“He didn’t say please.”
Gregory
and Jon Snow I mean Mr. Bradley head to the local church to find a
young girl chained to the baptismal font. Turns out the young lass is
possessed by Mother Malkin who has escaped due to the rising Blood Moon
that increases her evil powers or some such nonsense. Gregory doesn’t
seem to have much trouble exorcising Malkin from the girl, but when the
witch turns into a dragon things get a bit dicier.
“I’m getting too old for this shit.”
They
manage to trap Malkin in an iron cage, but sadly she is able to pull
poor Mr. Bradley in with her and Gregory is forced to burn them both.
Even worse is that this completely fails to kill Mother Malkin who
bursts out of the burning cage in full dragon glory. We later learn that
Gregory has had several apprentices over the years and they are all
dead. So not only is Master Gregory a drunken jerk he’s also bad at his
job. Of course Gregory doesn’t blame himself he just needs better
apprentices so he decides to find the seventh son of a seventh son as
they are apparently super powerful.
Tom Ward, the seventh son of a seventh son and assistant pig-keeper.
Master Gregory pays a bag of gold for Tom Ward (
Ben Barnes)
whose family doesn’t seem to have any qualms about letting their son
run off with a man whose track record with apprentices is quite
terrible. Tom’s mom (
Olivia Williams)
does give her son a mysterious pendant that one assumes will turn out
to be useful but is really just a stupid MacGuffin for the heroes and
villains to squabble over.
Pretty and all but not as cool as a lightsabre.
So
this is the time when we’d normally get the master/apprentice training
sequence but instead of a montage of months or years of training poor
Tom finds out they have a week to stop Mother Malkin even though the
previous apprentices who had ten years of training are all dead. So
Gregory is really banking on this whole seventh son thing which makes
one wonder why he went with anything else in the past. I’m assuming the
seventh son of a seventh son has got to be rare but Gregory found one
within about five minutes of looking. Gregory takes young Tom to a
nearby city to get supplies and this is one of your typical
medieval/fantasy cities that could not economically survive. It’s
plopped down on a barren rocky peninsula in the middle of a wasteland
with no signs of any type of agriculture that could support the
populace. It’s a cool visual but makes no logical sense.
So do they simply import everything?
It’s while wandering this logistical wonder of a city that Tom runs into Alice (
Alicia Vikander)
who is this film’s love interest and who is in danger of being burned
as a witch by the local mob. Tom informs the mob that he is an
apprentice to a spook and that he will take care of the witch. The mob
hands her over to Tom and then they just mosey off opposed to wanting to
hang around and watch the spook kill a witch as one would think angry
mobs are want to do. Maybe the town is suffering under some kind of
ennui spell?
“She turned me into a newt.”
The
reason for Tom’s intervention is that Alice is a girl from one of his
visions (Yes he has visions, just go with it). I myself would not have
needed supernatural visions to make me want to rescue a girl from an
angry mob, but what is most interesting is that Alice actually
is a witch. Her mother is Bony Lizzie (
Antje Traue) a notorious witch and sister to Mother Malkin. Now this is the kind of thing that bothered me in the Nicholas Cage film
Season of the Witch
where you have people trying to burn witches, now as we live in
enlightened times we look back at these people as ignorant assholes but
in the universe of this movie there are witches and most of them really
deserve a good burning. Sure, it turns out that Alice is not an evil
witch like Malkin but she is in league with them so you can’t really
blame the mob for wanting her dead. A film that makes me sympathize with
witch burners has made a drastic misstep.
So Tom’s mother-in-law to be is actually a witch, but she’s hot so that’s cool.
The
rest of the movie is your typical fantasy road picture where Gregory
and Tom will encounter various monsters and witches until we get the
final showdown with Mother Malkin. Director
Sergey Bodrov
has assembled quite the good cast for his movie but most of them are
either phoning it in or going over the top. I’m not sure what Jeff
Bridges was going for here as his Master Gregory is not only
completely
unlikable but he gives him a voice that is a cross between his Rooster
Cogburn and Tom Hardy’s Bane. It’s laughably bad. Ben Barnes is so bland
throughout the films running time all one can think of is how much
better it would have been if Kit Harrington hadn’t died at the beginning
of the film. Julianne Moore is swinging for the fences in her portrayal
of the evil Mother Malkin and is beyond cartoonish. Speaking of
cartoonish, most of the movies visual effects are of course CGI and
range from bad to decent.
Looking to fight Lou Ferigno’s Sinbad.
As
I mentioned before, this movie is based on a popular book series, but
pretty much everything but the names were changed. In the book Tom Ward
is a twelve year old. Mother Malkin doesn’t escape her imprisonment
because of any Blood Moon, she tricks young Tom into letting her out.
Tom does not save Alice from a mob but actually the other way around as
she saves him from a group of bullies. I’m not saying that sticking with
the book more closely would have resulted in a better movie but it
certainly would have been a more interesting one. As is for most of its
102 minute running time you just have to grin and bear it.
This
was a box office bomb that surprised no one. The first warnings we had
was the fact that its release date kept getting pushed back, which is
never a good sign, and then the final result slipped in and out of
theatres with barely a ripple. So I can safely say we are in no danger
of this franchise taking off.
"Could someone get my agent on the phone?"
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