The Woods backdrop
The Woods poster

THE WOODS

2006 US HMDB
April 24, 2006

In 1965 New England, a troubled girl encounters mysterious happenings in the woods surrounding an isolated girls school that she was sent to by her estranged parents.

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Crew

Production: Bryan Furst (Producer)Sean Furst (Producer)
Screenplay: David Ross (Screenplay)
Music: John Frizzell (Original Music Composer)Jammes Luckett (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: John R. Leonetti (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Antonluigi Pecchia aka Pax
Heather is the new student at Falburn Academy, a prestigious all-girls school hidden in the heart of the forest. During Heather's stay at this school, some mysterious events will occur: she will start having terrifying visions and hearing voices; moreover, the girl learns that according to a legend, there was a coven of witches in the school years before. Heather will understand that she is not the only one having those terrible visions and that the only rule of the school is: you cannot escape to the forest. "The Mystery of the Forest" is a good film, with some chilling scenes and an atmosphere surely of great suggestion; in some ways, it would almost come to compare to "Suspiria", with which a certain resemblance is noted in terms of content, but naturally the comparison with Dario Argento's masterpiece is qualitatively inappropriate. The first part of the narration may seem a bit slow, but then the film manages to "take off", despite the lack of excessive splatter presence except for some gore scenes at the end. "The Mystery of the Forest" may seem unoriginal in the plot, sometimes even predictable, but it is surely a film that is worth watching and that makes time pass quickly during its viewing without ever boring the viewer. Good is the performance of the lead actress Agnes Bruckner ("Venom", "Formula per un delitto") and Patricia Clarkson ("The Green Mile", "Good night and good luck"), the actress who plays the headmistress; undoubtedly good seems then the technique used by the director Lucky McKee, young author of the cult "May", his first film not yet released in Italy. McKee, despite the small number of films to his credit, quickly became part of the "Masters of horror". In short, "The Mystery of the Forest" is a film recommended to all horror lovers but especially to those who have loved "Suspiria". Overall, a good film.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

Wuchak

Wuchak

5 /10

Good plot and haunting ambiance, but mediocre story and weak characters

RELEASED IN 2006 and directed by Lucky McKee, "The Woods" chronicles events in 1965 New England when a troubled teen (Agnes Bruckner) is dropped off at a spooky remote boarding school for girls by her estranged parents (Bruce Campbell & Emma Campbell). Weird, witchy things ensue. Patricia Clarkson plays the dean while Lauren Birkell and Rachel Nichols play fellow students, one nice and the other mean.

This is a mystery/horror flick that combines “Suspiria” (1977) with elements of “Carrie” (1976) and “The Ruins” (2008) or “Man-Thing” (2005) (yes, I realize “The Ruins” came out later; I’m just trying to give people an idea of what the movie’s like). The haunting atmosphere and the Montreal location are very good, as well as the unsettling creepiness.

So the plot is a winner, the film looks good and there’s an effective darkness, if that’s your thang. Unfortunately, the story is underwhelming. It’s too ambiguous and feels incomplete, like a half hour of events were cut from the runtime. The hints of levitation and telekinetic abilities don't amount to much, nor do the leaves on a bed.

The characters are either underdeveloped or unlikable, except for maybe the protagonist (Bruckner). All we know about Heather is that she recently set fire to something and there’s enmity between her and her self-absorbed mother. The father is a pushover. We don't learn much about them or anyone else at the academy. Marcy provokes pity while Samantha is too over-the-top as the villain. You’re more curious about WHY she’s so mean than anything else. With all the young females available, the filmmakers drop the ball by not taking advantage of these resources (and I’m not tawkin’ bout nudity or sleaze).

The emotionless deliveries of the all-female faculty don’t help, but I realize they were written that way to create a sense of oddness and it works. The witchcraft elements are decidedly subdued, which I liked; the focus is on the formidableness of the forest itself (hence the title). Speaking of which, the woods F/X in the last act are well done.

THE MOVIE RUNS 1 hour 31 minutes and was shot at McGill University, Montréal, Québec. WRITER: David Ross.

GRADE: C

Kamurai

Kamurai

6 /10

Good watch, could watch again, and can recommend.

While I'm going to say that this movie was over-hyped quite a bit, it is good, but I don't feel like it really does anything specifically special.

It has a high level of good, but there is little I can see that would put that up to great. There are some scenes later in the movie as information is revealed that might surprise the audience, but I don't see it really as "scary" moments.

This is more of drip-fed information investigation movie with and all girls school, coming of age story, but the one thing it is clear it is trying to do, it tips its hand fairly early.

While I didn't find that detracting from the movie (it does add a bit of creepy atmosphere to the story), it could be a stronger reveal later.

Ultimately worth the watch, just go with low expectations.

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