Witch Hunt (1994 film)
Witch Hunt | |
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Genre |
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Written by | Joseph Dougherty |
Directed by | Paul Schrader |
Starring | |
Music by | Angelo Badalamenti |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producer | Joseph Dougherty (co-executive producer) |
Producers |
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Cinematography | Jean-Yves Escoffier |
Editor | Kristina Boden |
Running time | 100 minutes |
Production companies | |
Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release |
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Witch Hunt is a 1994 HBO fantasy detective television film directed by Paul Schrader and starring Dennis Hopper[1] and Eric Bogosian.[2] The film, written by Joseph Dougherty,[3] is a sequel to the 1991 film Cast a Deadly Spell, with Hopper playing private detective H. Phillip Lovecraft replacing Fred Ward. Additionally, many characters have different backstories than in Cast a Deadly Spell. For example, Lovecraft refuses to use magic in Cast a Deadly Spell on principle, but in Witch Hunt he refuses because of a bad experience he has had. The original music score was composed by Angelo Badalamenti.[3]
Cast
- Dennis Hopper - Harry Phillip Lovecraft (same initials as Howard Phillips Lovecraft)
- Penelope Ann Miller - Kim Hudson
- Eric Bogosian - Senator Larson Crockett
- Sheryl Lee Ralph - Hypolita Laveau Kropotkin
- Julian Sands - Finn Macha
- Valerie Mahaffey - Trudy
- John Epperson - Vivian Dart (as Lypsinka)
- Debi Mazar - The Manicurist
- Alan Rosenberg - N.J. Gotlieb
Plot
The film takes place in a fictional Los Angeles where magic is real, monsters and mythical beasts stalk the back alleys, zombies are used as cheap labor, and everyone—except hardboiled private investigator H. Philip Lovecraft (Hopper)—uses magic every day. Yet, cars, telephones and other modern technology also exist in this world. The year is 1953, at the beginning of the Second Red Scare, but in this universe magic is substituted for communism and the McCarthy-esque proceedings are being run by Senator Larson Crockett (Bogosian).
Lovecraft is hired by film star Kim Hudson (Miller) to dig up dirt on her husband, producer N.J. Gotlieb (Rosenberg), who is about to replace her on his latest film with a young starlet he may be having an affair with. Gaining entry to the studio with the help of practicing witch Hypolita Kropotkin (Ralph), his friend and landlady who is working for the studio, he encounters Finn Macha (Sands), a warlock and former private investigator with whom he had once crossed paths. When Gotlieb is murdered by magic, Senator Crockett uses the crime to make Kropotkin a scapegoat for use in his Anti-Magic crusade and uses newly-passed Congressional legislation to have her sentenced to death by public burning. Lovecraft must now not only save Kropotkin and uncover the real murderer, the motive behind the murder and the secrets Kim Hudson is hiding, but also confront the demons in his own past...a past that includes Finn Macha and the reason why Lovecraft will not use magic.
References
External links
- Witch Hunt at IMDb
- Witch Hunt at AllMovie
Template:Media based on H. P. Lovecraft works
- 1994 films
- 1994 television films
- 1994 horror films
- American comedy horror films
- American urban fantasy films
- American films
- American satirical films
- American detective films
- English-language films
- Films set in the 1950s
- American neo-noir films
- American supernatural horror films
- 1990s supernatural horror films
- Supernatural comedy films
- Cthulhu Mythos films
- HBO Films films
- Films based on works by H. P. Lovecraft
- 1990s comedy horror films
- Horror television films
- 1994 comedy films
- Comedy horror film stubs
- American television film stubs