7/10
Hungry Wives
27 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Very unusual Romero feature, which to me resembles a Cassavetes film, regarding an emotionally numb housewife, Joanie(Jan White)who desires something more than sitting at home while her hippie daughter Nikki(Joedda McClain)is out having a good time and husband, Jack(Bill Thunhurst)is always away on business. When Jack is home, he's constantly griping about this and that, and her daughter is dating Gregg(Raymond Laine), a young man who embraces a care-free lifestyle and carries a very unappealing disregard for the suburban rich and the old establishment. Joanie's sexual life is anything but grand and she finds herself drawn to Gregg, despite finding his manners off-putting, and is quite uncomfortable with his liberated, unconcerned behavior towards those he finds *ugly*. Yet, she desires for his touch after arriving home after an unfortunate night with a really troubled neighborhood gal-pal, who Gregg embarrassed earlier in the evening after a visit with a witch(..he tricked her into believing that she was smoking marijuana), hearing the passions of her daughter being *balled* by him in Nikki's bedroom. Joanie becomes intrigued with witchcraft after her initial visit with the neighborhood witch, and soon starts dabbling with it after purchasing some items from a store. When Nikki leaves home after realizing her mom was listening to her throes of sexual bliss, Joanie soon supposedly uses a spell on Gregg to seduce him, with an affair as a result. Joanie is also plagued with surreal dreams of a nightmare man(Bill Hinzman)breaking into her home, dressed in black with a creepy disfigured mask, chasing after her..when she attempts to escape Joanie finds that the outer door knobs are either chained or belted. In the opening scene, Joanie has a dream depicting various images of things both from her past(..a baby that may've been miscarried, limbs whipping across her face as hubby remains with his face buried in his newspaper unconcerned with her well being and practically ignoring her mere presence, future lover Gregg, among other things like riding a swing)and possible future, with Romero setting up the fact that this woman is troubled with a variety of emotional problems.

I think the film is an experimental, avant-garde way of viewing the psychological torment of a woman needing emotional fulfillment and not finding it. Through the subtle, under-played performance of Jan White(..I love an actress who tells us through her eyes what the character is truly going through, even if we can not see it on her face), we get an idea of how Joanie is hiding buried desires while attempting to disregard how she truly feels, eventually succumbing to them. I never felt she was a witch who could perform any act of magic, but someone embracing something new and different as a way of bringing meaning to an unrewarding life. Joanie is often shown, when her husband is home(..which isn't much), miserably withdrawn and perhaps seething with regret(..this was what I felt looking at her in the scenes when they are together in bed or at the dinner table)at ever marrying this man. I don't think many casual horror(..and Romero)fans will cling to "Season of the Witch" for it really isn't a horror film at all despite the deceptive title. More of a bleak study of a woman with too much time on her hands, living an unsatisfied life yearning for something more substantial. My favorite sequences concern Bill Hinzman's masked intruder who rushes Joanie attempting to assault her in her nightmares. Romero uses a lot of expressionistic lighting, often through window shades at night with his camera often closing tightly towards the faces of characters, mainly Joanie and Hinzman's nightmare man. The opening dream sequence is something straight out of Bunuel..all you'd need is a goat as a finishing touch. Most of the film, though, is dialogue and performance, as the film often scathingly involves the nature of bored housewives, their behavior and gossip. The film very much rides on the success of White's performance because Romero's camera often focuses completely on her face. A great deal of the film is often claustrophobic, taking place in Joanie's home and Romero pretty much captures every aspect inside..this is indeed Joanie's *prison* and I felt he does a good job of often confining us to this place. Still, the film is unpolished, often moving at a rather leisurely pace, with abrupt music disrupted by quick cuts from one scene to the next. The print, for which Anchor Bay apologized for, isn't the greatest in the world, looking quite affected by time.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed