“you talk like you believe in witches” yes, honey, cuz i do. i ain’t about to get hexed for being disrespectful 😕
@sebamm64694 жыл бұрын
Folks believe in world shaping entities, magic dudes and inexplicable conceptions. There are wierder things to believe in.
@marianaribeiro6964 жыл бұрын
We appreciate when people respect our practices! Thank you for this.
@adejareojo4 жыл бұрын
12:19 Ha! I literally called The Covenant "The Craft for Men" like it was some hair care product😂
@Dawghome4 жыл бұрын
@@adejareojo where can I buy some? What a great concept. Witchcraft for fly away hair, or frizzy hair that gets knotted up when you sleep and takes 30 minuets to undo where your arm aches and your scalp is sore because of the pulling and yanking you do because you get frustrated and annoyed with it!
@Dawghome4 жыл бұрын
@Yhara zayd. I was glad you spoke about periods, I know that film uses it for whatever reasons but I disagree as well with some of your views. I was introduced to a herb Agnus Castus, a herb that literally changed my life, or rather my periods which destroyed my studies because it gave me pain so excruciating I sometimes got relief by banging my head on a wall. 'natural herbs', that not so ironically medicines tried to mimick such as valerian = valium...herbs could be affordable, you might be fortunate to hunt them yourself or find a 'witch', or herbalist who stocked them. And knowledge of these herbs could be taught, passed down in families. 'They' demonised this practise quite simply because money could and was/is made on the back of knowledge many times offered either freely or affordable. As a child I was sent on an errand to donate a basket of carrots that we grew as payment. I don't think dropping off a basket of carrots at my chemist for my anti depressants would even be understood let alone accepted as payment. On some of my periods I'd be so swollen inside that internal suppositories would either not go in or were out again in seconds. One of my biggest liberations has been to not have them any more, thank God ive lived long enough to experience their demise. Periods effected my mental health and phisical too abilities as well. I once lifted and threw a very heavy armchair across the room because i was rebelling against a boyfriend trying to dictate what i ' had to do'...or else! I couldn't shove that armchair two inches with my body weight to hoover underneath it!!! Not special powers, it's just that us humans do have levels to our abilities when we or loved ones are in major crisis. Natural herbs were demonised as 'witchcraft', for all sorts of reasons, especially because the majority that learned these skills were female. The churches had Eve, so 'the fall' of man was all women's fault...and men? can't help it/themselves, it's never their fault or responsibility! Periods were proof of our demon status, the blood the evidence, we weren't stabbed yet we bleed and do it regularly and the moon it's rhythms, la lune, or loon and loony, crazy. This ability to bleed each month weren't powers we summoned up so god must be involved somewhere but God in most western religions is a man so why would a man create this, let's avoid that question, women have it so it's easier to blame them, a kind of evidence of god's wrath on them, yeh that fits the bill let's run with that.
@sydneeellison994 жыл бұрын
I wish Rochelle had a deeper story besides being the object of racism. while i like her revenge against laura who clearly deserved everything she had coming to her i just wish we knew more about Rochelle.
@LaneMaxfield4 жыл бұрын
Rochelle got so shortchanged in the film! It did feel very "and one of them's Black, so her problem is being Black. On to the next character!"
@acidroofproductions93784 жыл бұрын
@@LaneMaxfield I know right! Like we don't even see her home situation.
@LaneMaxfield4 жыл бұрын
@@acidroofproductions9378 Apparently there was a deleted scene with her parents that would have fleshed her out, and it was completely deleted. I think Rachel True's acting really saved the character, because there is so much nuance in her expressions, but she should have had more.
@olivepaul47984 жыл бұрын
One of my biggest wishes every time I watch the movie is that there was more Rochelle
@Jennie-mm5zd4 жыл бұрын
There was also a deleted scene were Sarah was able to convince Rochelle and Bonnie that Nancy is becoming more unhinged. But then Nancy bullied Rochelle and Bonnie telling them nobody wanted to see them for being ugly or being the only black girl or be their friend and was angry if they betrayed her. So i think, unfortunately, they left Rochelle as following Nancy without giving her more growth. I truly feel she didn't deserve to be seen as a supporting antagonist at the end of the film
@bensloan31094 жыл бұрын
OH HE'S SORRY, HE'S SORRY, HE'S SORRY god I love that scene.
@theriahs34484 жыл бұрын
"You don't even _EXIST_ to me ! " 🖤🥀
@bensloan31094 жыл бұрын
@@theriahs3448 she was at the height of reclaiming the power he took from her by spreading rumors and I live for it.
@aleksstan70094 жыл бұрын
that scene gave me nightmares when I was a teenager and seeing it again with 35, it's still nightmare fuel 😨
@amidreaming3333 жыл бұрын
@@aleksstan7009 why?
@inessa59233 жыл бұрын
@@bensloan3109 I mean, she was still a shitty person. That's what lead her to her fate.
@queencockroach4 жыл бұрын
the reason i love the craft so much is that it has such empathy for teen girls' anger. it understands how bieng an outsider and having to struggle can make you do hurtful things. nancy wasn't right in her intention to kill sarah but she wasn't a villian, at least by my interpretation. she's a girl who experienced sexual abuse from her stepfather, and when she tried to defend another girl against the same thing, she was thanked by bieng ostracized from the one place she felt safe. the craft: legacy could have expanded on these themes, especially in lending this degree of complexity and empathy to it's black characters, but instead it cashed in on the trendiness of witchcraft and was more concerned with aesthetics than story. i know everyone on set was working hard and had the best of intentions, but it was ultimately very disappointing to me. amazing video as always, you have such smart analysis of so many interesting topics 🖤🖤🖤
@janaekelis4 жыл бұрын
So true! I think they could have added other races and alter the aesthetic to another culture of witch craft. Sara was a bland main character, everyone loves nancy more. They could have rectified that
@kimberlygaugh40854 жыл бұрын
Well said! I'm curious if we'll ever get another installment in the craft world, and if so, what it can do to hold up rightly next to the og like Cobra Kai to The Karate Kid franchise.
@deadgirls38744 жыл бұрын
I always felt that way too and nice Veronica Icon the original archies comics are my favorite.I liked how they did some real craft too like the binding spell was spot on on and some of the others even if a little too hollywood.
@kimberlygaugh40854 жыл бұрын
@MB definitely! The new film is just too clean & even has that Sony gleam to it that I don't like about their films. Literally nothing in legacy felt personal, serious, etc.
@queencockroach4 жыл бұрын
@@kimberlygaugh4085 the craft tells such a small but complete story, i think it would be hard to make a good spin-off/sequel. cobra kai is a good example because it would have to do something really creative and completely different to be good, imo.
@kittygrimm73014 жыл бұрын
Wait a minute. In the original film, it's actually *Sarah* who's the natural witch and it's implied that the rest of the coven are just leeching off her powers, so how the hell did David Dckasdfghjklvny steal Nancy's powers if she didn't really have any?
@Yharazayd4 жыл бұрын
THIS! a million times! i was so confused
@kittygrimm73014 жыл бұрын
@@Yharazayd P.S. I think it's awesome that you dressed up as Rochelle and that Rachel True noticed. Maybe it's because I know the movie so well, but I would have recognized you. Hell, I would have dressed up as Nancy just to salute you!
@notnow69464 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I kept asking myself the same question. The minute she said she didn't know about her family tree I knew they would make her Nancy's daughter (thanks trailer) and spent the rest of the movie annoyed at the huge inconsistency. Even before the reveal. The OG is bookended by the fact that they didn't have much power before Sarah's arrival and were completely powerless in the end while Sarah still had power. Grrr. Still annoyed by this
@bubbles48974 жыл бұрын
Isn’t the idea of a “natural witch” offensive to actual witches? Bcus no one is really out here lifting objects with their minds? I’m confused
@bubbles48974 жыл бұрын
@A it is that different though. “Natural witches” don’t exist, while natural athletes do. Like I said, you don’t see anyone lifting up pencils only using their mind, cuz that’s impossible. Also, witchcraft requires spells and other stuff, lifting up a pencil aint witchcraft. Telekinesis isn’t witchcraft
@0Trixa04 жыл бұрын
(CW: menstruation details) Weird flex, but as someone who had VERY heavy (bleed through several layers) and VERY irregular (every 3-6 months at random) periods I can confirm you're never gonna get it dripping like in The Craft Legacy. Bleeding through your jeans and leaving a smear on the seat and a butt stain after starting unexpectedly? Totally has happened to me, VERY relatable. Dripping out the back? Girl has PCOS and probably burst a cyst and should be writhing in pain.
@kittygrimm73014 жыл бұрын
That actually happened to me too in bio class when I was about 17 and I have endometriosis, which makes my time of the month heavier and more painful than normal. Didn't happen like that, but it still remains the most embarrassing moment of my life.
@liamena45204 жыл бұрын
On a negligent day in a dress something similar to this happened to me on break at work, luckily I was outside sitting on a bench and I was surrounded by older women who got me together and saved me from embarrassment, gods bless. I have have a heavy flow, I was in a dress, and I was sleep deprived trying to keep up with a job and high school so I was really waving away my body’s red flags. Even if the circumstances were perfect I don’t see this happening through denim even if someone has a heavy flow - cut back on the corn syrup and put her in a dress and maybe I’d buy it.
@Justplainsomething4 жыл бұрын
Jeans soak that shit up!
@Curlyography4 жыл бұрын
"Weird flex"🤣 Yes, that girl would have needed to be rushed to the hospital, asap.
@vamperilous7494 жыл бұрын
IKR?? This is legit one of my biggest pet peeves in movies/tv. I know it’s usually not that big of a deal in the long run, but like. How much do people think we’re bleeding at once to create Mortal Combat levels of gore, even through our clothes?? It’s just silly.
@nas74164 жыл бұрын
On my rewatch, I was laughing at that "I wish I had more black friends" line because, throughout all the school scenes, you see black students EVERYWHERE! I don't know if Zoe Lister-Jones screwed up and forgot she was trying to have Tabitha be the only black kid in school or if the movie just never gave us the reason why Tabitha was alienated from the other black kids in that school but it was a bad attempt nonetheless.
@liamkwon24104 жыл бұрын
I couldn’t tell if it was supposed to be a “self-aware” jab at the fact that Tabby was the only black character that wasn’t an extra, or if it was extremely self-unaware and Lister-Jones really thought she was being poignant ... as if she didn’t write this movie and actively neglect to include more than one black character
@Grooovyghosty4 жыл бұрын
zoe couldve gave more details of the character and make her an outcast of her own community because it tends to happen, how you can be excluded from people who literally are the same as you, and would have probably made that line WAY more understandable but nah, had her say that and then nothing else happened
@alexislove77434 жыл бұрын
It should be explained more that- for whatever reason they chose- she was shunned by her own community. Dealing with the issue of black people feeling that if they don't fit the stereotype of black people they Dont fit in
@alexislove77434 жыл бұрын
Would have given the character more depth
@kimmieharu4 жыл бұрын
Exactly! I thought the same thing. I feel like it was an outdated issue to be addressing especially in the way that she did. Like it made sense to do it in the 90s but for now, it needed more. Definitely agree with the people saying it should of been a deeper look into why the black community at her school alienated her, because based on what we see she doesnt seem super outlandish to the teens to see nowadays. I feel like making Tabby into a really strong goth character would of been a good way to show the divide when it comes to stereotypes in black communities and a little nod to the original.
@haleylikesapples4 жыл бұрын
im sorry, but im so mad that the lister jones talks SPECIFICALLY how she felt seen by the girls in the craft looking like outsiders and then styles all her leads like something out of riverdale, all polish and sheen... like... I agree! they don't have to be goth or punk, but this doesn't look like girls dressing to make themselves happy they look like they were styled by someone in hollywood
@aburden41484 жыл бұрын
I feel like they didn’t even give each girl their own style. I feel like there is at least one goth girl in every coven. They all dress the same
@hambone49844 жыл бұрын
This movie gives me the same vibe as the Heathers "reboot"
@sylentmari47454 жыл бұрын
@Mynxii It was a TV series that aired on Paramount Network. I'm not sure how many episodes, but it was missing the snark and "vibe" of the movie, IMO.
@KDbelieves4 жыл бұрын
She just said that to sell the film.
@tired58803 жыл бұрын
@Mynxii please don't worry about it its reaaaaly bad. The concept was literally "wHAT ABOUT heathers. BUT, make the minorities being the heathers and bully a white skninny cishet gurl cuz *we live in a society* "
@chloec35094 жыл бұрын
I just want to talk about the clothes for sec tho.. like I love the idea of a more girly witch but the outfits weren’t rly good and they all kinda wore the same ish style yk. I think we should’ve at least got to know the characters by the clothes if we couldn’t know there backgrounds
@liamena45204 жыл бұрын
I thought about this the whole time I was watching the movie. Personal style says so much about a character on its own and it would have been nice to at least have each girl fleshed out by her wardrobe and choice of style - it would cost 0 screen time and the director could have still made the self insert fanfic the way she wanted. Things like this made me feel that not as much care and thought was put into the film as I had initially been lead to believe, it's great that production took into account the experience and beliefs of real practicing witches and I will never not root for representation but it all feels rather performative once we get into the details.
@stephaniewozny38524 жыл бұрын
Spot on. In character design, costume/wardrobe can say so much about a character with one glance if done right.
@maggie59904 жыл бұрын
It seems like they saw the costumes for Euphoria and how much everyone was copying them, and went "WE NEED OUR CHARACTERS TO BE MORE STYLISH!" Even though the girls are supposed to be the outcasts/losers of the school. Hell, in the original when we're first introduced to the girls, they're dressed rather plain, or at least more offbeat than their peers. The iconic walking montage with their new clothes comes when the characters have grown into their powers and exploited them for personal gain.
@someothername78864 жыл бұрын
The styles looked fine, but they didn’t really help make the characters stand out as outcasts if that makes sense! Outcasts don’t always have to wear goth clothes, but when the characters look like everyone else in their school, it doesn’t really make sense as to why they are ostracized to the extent that they are (of course, “weird” characteristics play a bigger role in someone being ostracized than whatever they are wearing, but I just find it hard to believe that 4 pretty teenage girls, who look like just about everyone else in the school, would be ostracized to the point that they are in the movie) It would’ve been nice to see little touches to the characters’ styles that not only helped them stand out from the other students, but also made the other students scared or judgmental of them.
@anthonywyattStylist4 жыл бұрын
It was the 90s get over it
@kaskus71474 жыл бұрын
The magic "glitter" and shiny auras take it to a very Disney or Sabrina (the t.v. show) level. I get the feeling that this movie wasn't supposed to be a Craft when it was first written. It seems like it was shoved in at the end. I think people tend to forget that there is a desperation to Nancy. She has felt so powerless for so long that the idea of it being taken away makes her willing to do anything to keep the control.
@blackjack72073 жыл бұрын
The glitter definetly, the auras kinda look like that after some practice but it is too much
@cidevant0024 жыл бұрын
The Covenant is a messy movie indeed but it has one saving grace: the homoerotic subtext is off the charts. I had a lot of fun as a teenager imagining a whole ass fanfiction all about the Not Draco Malfoy guy being with Harry Not Glasses Potter that is the main guy.
@xxprizefighterxx4 жыл бұрын
Almost as unintentionally gay as Nightmare on Elm Street 2
@Frosting10004 жыл бұрын
I mean the guy who made it was gay, he made a lot of other low budget borderline gay porn movies (and “a talking cat”, for some reason)
@brandonchandlerMGnO4 жыл бұрын
Even knowing about that before I went in, it's hard to get past all that blue from the get go.
@kostajovanovic37114 жыл бұрын
@@xxprizefighterxx but nightmare 2 is intentional
@aleksstan70094 жыл бұрын
the not draco malfoy guy is exactly how I imagined draco malfoy...after reading about 100 fanfics where he is described as looking like a dream boy who is rescued by harry or vice versa🤣
@nas74164 жыл бұрын
I'm screaming because I would've never known The Covenant was number one in the box office at some point in time. I thought it was some obscure straight to DVD movie I just randomly had in my house.
@Pinkladyisv4 жыл бұрын
Same! I don’t even really remember it being promoted. I think Chronicle is very underrated; it’s really good. I love the craft; especially because I felt like an outsider as a kid. Seeing a black girl in this goth look was also very cool to me.
@Social_Pugatory3 жыл бұрын
Right I remember my folks getting it from like red box or something back when Red box dvd delivery and Netflix dvd delivery were all the rage. 😂
@carolineainenibhreithimh76523 жыл бұрын
My friend gave it to me. Never heard off it before she did
@noirlux56094 жыл бұрын
Ok those nasty reviews of the craft actually got me heated
@kittygrimm73014 жыл бұрын
Gotta love how they're all from middle-aged white dudes, though.
@acidroofproductions93784 жыл бұрын
@@kittygrimm7301 I was shouting about that! Like "You're not the target audience, shut up!"
@Toxihex4 жыл бұрын
Human stupidity this severe being allowed to exist in the same universe as me is what annoys me the most. You can feel the energy of "ANYONE who even CONDONES this unchristian witchcraft loving should have their flesh shredded off their backs into a pile and be made to shovel it into their enormous penis-gluttonous maws with a pitchfork, all while begging Jesus for forgiveness and hoping he can make out their pitiful squeals of repentance. Amen."
@Stinkystunnedstinker4 жыл бұрын
@@kittygrimm7301 Yeees! I know the word "boomer" is overused now, but you gotta call a spade a spade, and those reviews are classic boomer antics
@MidnightatMidian4 жыл бұрын
A lot of millenials vibes and simps in this comment section lolololol, maybe you should understand that ''criticism'' is not a one way point of view... I'll guess it's true what they say, the new generations beeing dumbed down by the overuse of smartphones hahahaha!!!
@traversdow44532 жыл бұрын
The Craft is easily one of the most influential films of its time. Charmed ran for 8 seasons, an entire ebay industry sprang up and you can find Hot Topic outfits inspired by the movie to this day almost 30 years later. Great video
@JaiProdz4 жыл бұрын
I'm SO hyped to get into this 43 minute snack omg.
@janbonne4 жыл бұрын
Is a meal!
@thaichillidippingsauce5934 жыл бұрын
666 likes
@JaiProdz4 жыл бұрын
@@thaichillidippingsauce593 period
@DeathToTheOriginalSound3 жыл бұрын
Thought It was Just Me, I Had To Hook This Up To My TV
@nas74164 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't mention AHS: Coven when talking about other reimaginings and inspirations of the Craft. I think that season had an extremely similar effect on the culture that the Craft had/has.
@bb-ih9hg4 жыл бұрын
Coven was a weird season bc although yeah, I liked it, I wish it had been scarier behind Dalphene and that it didn't feel so cute sometimes.
@Yharazayd4 жыл бұрын
ha, i didn’t mention it because i haven’t watched an episode of AHS since asylum and really didn’t want to :/
@nas74164 жыл бұрын
@@Yharazayd Fair enough
@TheFortunekid114 жыл бұрын
@@Yharazayd I think you might like Coven if you disliked the early AHS seasons as its unlike any other season before its time and after in message/tone/themes. I really enjoyed it as someone pretty critical of AHS.
@blackphoenix774 жыл бұрын
@@Yharazayd I don't blame you, but AHS: Coven was actually good.
@wendynerd11994 жыл бұрын
Maybe those reviewers just find it hilarious when women are powerful.
@ladiorange4 жыл бұрын
I would say whenever I see a negative review written by a male about a female led movie, I am just too suspicious!
@JadyLester4 жыл бұрын
Or intimidating, like "Hahaha SHUT UP"
@briannalee19984 жыл бұрын
Wendy Nerd it definitely has to do with their biases of women and our stories in general.
@_Alimm4 жыл бұрын
A word.
@GullibleTarget4 жыл бұрын
Maybe they just did not like the movie. I loved the original and that movie certainly wasn't made to make men feel comfortable. they LOVED it! The reason why I think female empowerment is being 'riduculed' is that, the sequel was made in this day and age where virtue-signalling matters more but cheapens the issue. I call it the commodification and exploitation of real societal issues. And in todays' society it is so much easier to just go online and shout into the 'echo chamber' of multimedia until they hear others saying the same thing:"He must have a problem with women"
@rilleygriffin3 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1987 and was in elementary school when my mom took me to the craft in theatre. It honestly shaped the witch I am today, and I owe so much to the accuracy of it.
@Kevin-rg3yc4 жыл бұрын
While there are cult classics that are meant for ever even when the film as a whole is mediocre or above average, there are still cult classics like the craft, Jennifer’s body, foxy brown, shaft, vampire in Brooklyn and mean girls that were already masterpieces but weren’t appreciated in their time of release. I feel the mixed reviews for the craft a lot of it came from male critics who just didn’t get the point of the film especially since there was rarely a dominating male character present the in the film and I believe part of why it has become a cult classic is bc of the increasing diversity of film and cultural critics, who would understood the importance of the film. It reminds of what the different critical reception to alternative female artists when lana Del Rey was coming out VS now that Billie Eilish, lorde, Halsey, FKA Twings and Melanie Martinez are thriving. It just goes to show that 1) not all films that are critically panned or mixed are actually 100% horrible, there are a lot that are but there are an equal amount that are actually good or straight masterpieces but are reviewed predominantly by a certain demographic with prejudice and bigotry views and 2) there is a thing of people picking and choosing which film based off of its genre, plot lines and cast members is only considered prestigious or great cinema
@janaekelis4 жыл бұрын
Melanie and lorde were def in the early 2010s. I remember my male cousin asking me why i dont have any male artists on my playlist. Never really noticed how women coming out after early 2000s had it harder
@Kevin-rg3yc4 жыл бұрын
@@janaekelis that’s true lorde first album came out a full year after Lana dropped born to die
@janaekelis4 жыл бұрын
@@Kevin-rg3yc i think bc this was after the girl group era in the west, solo women had it harder
@athenajaxon23974 жыл бұрын
You had me until you mentioned Vampire in Brooklyn that's one of the worst movies I've ever seen
@Kevin-rg3yc3 жыл бұрын
@@athenajaxon2397 lol I i understand I first thought that film was trash until I got older and loved it more. Don’t get it wrong it got a lot of flaws but it’s not as bad as everyone think it is
@jordanupstream28894 жыл бұрын
I feel like this movie was made by someone who grew up loving the original, and the world it created and since then always pictured themselves in the world of the craft. So once the opportunity came for them to make the "fanfic" they fantasied about from their teen years they started writing the movie and then half way through realized that they were the only main character so they went back and sprinkled other characters in that had subpar backstories and development and wouldn't overshadow the fantasy they had made for themselves when they were younger
@princessnikoblackwood40414 жыл бұрын
omg, i can see that being the case
@chikari1234 жыл бұрын
There’s always something that’s so fascinating to me about witches and the attribution to women. It really show cases men’s hatred for women, all of witchcraft was born out of the idea of women being different, evil and sinister because of their ability to create life and because we menstruate. It’s so misogynistic, but to see women reclaim and embrace it is so powerful. Idk I think the way witches and women are thought about is so indicative of how society at large feels about womanhood.
@LucianCorrvinus3 жыл бұрын
You wound the likes as I with your broad brush. Further you forget in the Faith, the Goddess and God are equals. You cannot make a war into a partnership. Ever. Learn from the mistakes of the Men who trod upon the Sacred nature of Women, dont replicate the actions to satisfy a feeling of deserved punishment. Not all Men are the same....
@mynameisambertoo73793 жыл бұрын
@@LucianCorrvinus What does this even mean? The only sentence I understand is the horribly sexist one you mentioned.
@The-bird-outside-your-door Жыл бұрын
@@LucianCorrvinus is this satire?
@k_a_y_l_e_e3 жыл бұрын
"it's just too much" sums up a lot of culture and society in the past decade or so. everything is everything all at once, all the time. there is no subtlety anymore.
@k_a_y_l_e_e3 жыл бұрын
@Richie for sure. everything is either "this" or "that" but the "in between" seems to get lost. idek if that makes sense but i'm really tired and that's all i can think to say rn lololol. i mean, it's either blatantly obvious or soooo out there that the meaning gets completely washed out.
@RivenLove4 жыл бұрын
When I still used pads I couldn't tell when it was leaking because it was just always kind of wet. So while that's definitely exaggerated in the movie, I can confirm from experience that you can leak onto a seat in the middle of class and not realize.
@acidroofproductions93784 жыл бұрын
Periods, when the long t-shirts that cover your bum in come in handy.
@LongForgottenJ4 жыл бұрын
@@acidroofproductions9378 don’t forget the superfluous sweatshirt to tie around your waist
@lunar_magick3 жыл бұрын
Unfortunatley i can confirm this amount of blood to be true -_- SO fucking glad i found a contaceptive that stops my period. Legit id pass out ,vomit or just feel like i was going to die all the time. No shame in periods, but shame no one helped me earlier
@bb-ih9hg4 жыл бұрын
The craft is so anti anti women. Women being flawed is real - nobody wants to see perfectly good people in movies. It's too weird. That's anti woman - to think women are too delicate and perfect and flawless and sweet is to throw real women out of the world. Why do men get to play anti hero's and get praise, but when women play "flawed" characters, it's "anti women"? that's just dumd and lazy.
@notnow69464 жыл бұрын
If anything, this portrayal that women are supposed to be nice, perfect, accepting and loving is possibly the most antiwomen thing I keep seeing lately. Isn't that what feminists have claimed the patriarchy has foisted upon women to shut us up? I could relate to the Craft as a someone who can be mean and selfish as well as compassionate and empathetic. That movie helped me embrace my darkness even more instead of pretending it didn't exist, which is what this movie does. But I guess it's fitting for the most fragile generation known to mankind.
@Toxihex4 жыл бұрын
Not to mention either the absolute lack of contrast (ex. "butch woman stronk and gay and acting out male stereotypes") or overplaying of contrast (ex. "femme girl nice and delicate but very opinionated and strong which baffles everyone and grants her +500 plot armor out of the sheer impression she leaves on everyone with this never seen before feat of being unlike anyone else"). I mean, I get it, people are supposed to build up a view of the world growing up and possibly we just aren't built to process and make sense of THIS much information at once, but come on, good movies shouldn't be as rare as they are.
@azuki_O3 жыл бұрын
The human brain tend to to not notice if you write a word twice. At first I didn't notice that you wrote ANTI ANTI women.
@sc6658 Жыл бұрын
Not to Homestuck on main but this is why Vriska Serket is an amazing character. No but this is so real. Like, I was a teenage girl (I’m 27 now) who was one of the weird girls in high school and I love movies like The Craft because they just feel incredibly authentic to me. I’ve had messy friendships that imploded, I did weird witchcraft shit in the woods with my neighbor in high school, etc. And I love the portrayal of teenage girls as complicated people with complicated emotions who act out and get frustrated with each other and make mistakes because it’s incredibly cathartic and authentic to watch. And movies like The Craft give time and space reminding people that women are just as complex and nuances as people as men are.
@Nathouuuutheone Жыл бұрын
@@azuki_Ooh wow big same, I was so confused
@ZayIsNerd4 жыл бұрын
The connection you made with Juice, The Craft, & Chronicle was too spot on. Now I gotta rewatch all 3
@ivanpabon27414 жыл бұрын
nope
@briatucker45882 жыл бұрын
I was dying laughing the whole scene cuz it was accurate af😭
@closetmonstar4 жыл бұрын
That sucks. My favorite thing about the original was the different storylines of each of the girls, and that none of them were perfect, or made the best choices. Rochelle was the best because what she experienced hit her hard, and her revenge spell did not seem to satisfy her the way she hoped it would. She’s also the first one to take a stand and speak out against Nancy and what they are doing to Sarah. I wish I could have seen more of her character.
@animemicheal4 жыл бұрын
The new craft movie is like watching a long trailer, doesn’t feel real, no getting to know the characters, feels really fake. *spoilers* _ _ _ _ Some how a man is more powerful that four girls. It bothers me deeply that they messed it up that bad. It’s terribly edited too. The effects already don’t look amazing, so in a few years it’ll look really bad. I loved the original craft movie so much.
@ghouling11114 жыл бұрын
Yep. no character development at all
@fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan47484 жыл бұрын
it was shit
@pedroxqui4 жыл бұрын
I haven't seen this movie, BUT, the idea of a full grown experienced person being more powerfull than 3 newbie teenagers and a super newbie teenager, that feels correct... It's really lame in movies when a teen is somehow able to defeat a powerfull grown up. It doesn't matter the sex of anyone. Although I can see how in a movie about feminism it leaves a bad taste when is a man against girls
@brandonchandlerMGnO4 жыл бұрын
Also, didn't that guy absorb the powers of the main girl's mother or something.
@briannalee19984 жыл бұрын
micheal ross I don't plan on watching it
@xBINARYGODx4 жыл бұрын
"older (straight, white) men don't like film starring teenage girls" are what most of those negative reviews sound like. "It couldn't decide what it wanted to be" Uhhhh.... seriously? I like the film (maybe a lot), and so am not some rabid fan, but that is just a bizarre take.
@Kawaiicarly4 жыл бұрын
Let me elaborate what she means in more nuanced terms. The original Craft came out in 1996 and is a movie that is predominantly centered around women, traditional witchcraft, and femininity. These kinda of movies were on the rise, but the Craft was particularly gritty and upfront with it’s feminist themes. I would more or less say this is a cult movie as it lacks general appeal and is aimed at a very specific demographic, namely young women. And while movies aimed at teenager girls tend to be overlooked by the mostly older, movie critics they often are hailed as revolutionary by the audience it was created for (Mean Girls, Jennifers Body). It’s not an insult to analyze why this movie lacked general critic appeal to men, just an observation that it doesn’t hit the same way for men as it tends to for women ; It seeks to explain why it wasn’t well received despite how beloved it is.
@rubinasmith97414 жыл бұрын
any movie about witchcraft that doesn't honour the actual danger of being 'othered' or as this movie puts it 'a weirdo' smacks of insincerity
@LucianCorrvinus3 жыл бұрын
While othering may always be a thing Witches experience...I feel that the depth of it today may not be to the measure of the past. We are more visible now than we have been since before the Burning Times. The solitary nature that many older Witches knew, even the Covenbound, is been overcome by social media. The fact that we are recognized in the West as a religion, with the attendant protections brings us out of the shadows. While all who seek the Ways we know shall stay within them, the othering will be greatly diminished. The fact that we ARE diffrent should make it apparent, it will never go away. Which is all to the good, as the Call to serve is not for the faint of Heart. And for the Witch to lose Her or His Mystery, would be an end to the persuit of the Great Art.
@KuchiKopi1793 жыл бұрын
@@LucianCorrvinus I am a sorceror, not a witch.
@riley83853 жыл бұрын
@@LucianCorrvinus You're like those catholics who roleplay as being persecutted. Nobody cares about your fake beliefs. Women in the past were burned because some asshole accused them of witchcraft after rejecting their advances, because someone wanted their property and that sort of thing. Anything else you decided to pick up after researching online is just you being a damn lunatic.
@UPBEATFOREVER2 жыл бұрын
"We are the weirdos,busdriver!"😁😁😁😁😁
@gfadkghjreoi7 ай бұрын
that overlay of juice, the craft, and chronicle’s “peak descent into madness” scenes was incredible, wow
@JaiProdz4 жыл бұрын
Honestly Rachel True was right abt Charmed and I'm glad she called it out. Also Aviva is a TOTAL wannabe of Nancy Downs. "The Fourth Sister" is her episode! Also dead mothers is a theme in both TC and Charmed.
@Kevin-rg3yc4 жыл бұрын
What did she say about charmed??
@JaiProdz4 жыл бұрын
@@Kevin-rg3yc rachel said they copied the font, the theme song and basic bones of her film but didn't cast a Black girl. Which...is all true
@kimberlygaugh40854 жыл бұрын
@@JaiProdz wow. I've never seen charmed but that is just crazy to think about all those similarities to the craft. What an insult
@Kevin-rg3yc4 жыл бұрын
@@JaiProdz ohhh wow interesting this could possibly explain why for the new reboot all the new girls are women of color. It seems CW have a racial casting problem in general bc for gossip girl they barely had any actors or actresses of color in major roles and the only one (Vanessa) was written horribly, even the author of the original book series hated how they did Vanessa and basically said they took what was suppose for her and gave it to blair
@sademouton73914 жыл бұрын
@@kimberlygaugh4085 honestly charmed is great. I love the storylines and plots. I even love the characters. With out the craft, we wouldn’t have charmed.
@DrGregoryHouseIT4 жыл бұрын
I never thought of Chronicle as a boy Craft, I thought it was more of a boy Carrie, with Andrew as the male version of Carrie. The Craft Legacy decides to develop Timmy... only to kill him offscreen. And at the end Adam's sons are all but forgotten for no good reason.
@liamkwon24104 жыл бұрын
Like why were Adam’s sons even in the movie? Not one of them provided any real plot, and they were clearly setting up a storyline for Isaiah, with the stuff with Timmy, and his sleepwalking, only to totally abandon it the second Timmy died? It’s like the movie was a beginning and an end. It felt like the entire middle was missing.
@CriticalFangirl3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!! I'm thankfully not the only one who was confused by the Chronicle comparison. Chronicle's more about superpowers than it is witchcraft.
@UPBEATFOREVER2 жыл бұрын
" they're all going to laugh at you!"
@cythatnerd4 жыл бұрын
I feel like Legacy desperately wanted to get Millie Bobby Brown for the title role, but couldn't, so they decided to make the main actress look as similar as possible to either trick people watching it or at least get people Googling it to bump it up.
@ellierainy4124 жыл бұрын
The Craft was one of my comfort zone movies when I was a teen and still has a special place in my heart
@marchingham4 жыл бұрын
The craft for boys. OMG. I cackled lolol. Also Dane Dehaan is so good. SO good. Even if the movies he's in are shit, HE is consistently spectacular.
@revolutionofthekind4 жыл бұрын
There were a lot of parts about the original movie I really enjoyed and thought was super subversive, especially for the time period of the mid 90s, that I thought were very clever and well written. What Rochelle goes through is like...pitch perfect for the type of anti-black racism you go through in an all white school where youre the only black person. I've been there and it traumatized me in a way only a few things have. But one things ice noticed people never bring up..is the ableism. The ending of that movie, the way nancy is portrayed, is so incredibly ableist it ruined the entire movie for me as someone who was institutionalized several times. It broke my heart, and I wish i could regard it as fondly as other people do. But that horrific ableism is just not something I can forgive, and I wish more people would actually talk about and critique it. Sighs
@janaekelis4 жыл бұрын
Yes, mental illness in film is always shown weirdly
@TheLeah23444 жыл бұрын
Yup I went to a mostly white High school with only a small group of black people and I knew almost all of the black kids. I experienced anti black racism multiple times.
@b2serious3 жыл бұрын
Its a 90's movie, alot of ableism, racism, homophobia in that era while it shouldnt be "forgiven", it shouldnt be held up to todays stantards as much. Its like digging up 13 year old myspace comment of someone saying something stupid.
@anjofefe94 жыл бұрын
i read the craft and i just clicked
@mcarts47224 жыл бұрын
Legacy sounds like if Riverdale had a baby with Sabrina
@JaiProdz4 жыл бұрын
Assassination Nation, from Sam Levinson of Euphoria comes to mind as well, it's very clearly a homage to 80s slashers, 90s teen films and takes place in Salem. It's lovely, and has a clique with a Black girl and Trans girl, who is honestly the hero of the story
@Noah-rq3xt4 жыл бұрын
love Assassination Nation!!!
@transgoddess314 жыл бұрын
A trans girl who was put in for woke points in a way that was so ...boring "Hey im trans. We break down the binary here" Me: and.... This movie was so weak
@Jackieeeisvibing6 ай бұрын
@@transgoddess31her killing the transphobia and the dude having to struggle with his attraction to her is like realistic and the faćade she put in through half the film until she was about to die
@cherrynone10614 жыл бұрын
i think the only film that comes close to the feel of the craft but isn't the craft is the swedish film Cirkeln (the circle). it's about a group of very different girls (and one boy) from a school that develop powers and are kinda forced into a coven. it hits all the beats while being firmly rooted in the characters (although it gets a little bad cgi at the end ngl).
@plantenmama32064 жыл бұрын
I've read the books. I didn't know there is a series.
@cherrynone10614 жыл бұрын
@@plantenmama3206 only a movie. they didn't recieve funding for the whole franchise tho
@megankerr22244 жыл бұрын
I loved those books! Plus they were super inclusive when it came to sexuality
@lovelykay36144 жыл бұрын
that scene with Nancy just made me wanna go watch it again.
@powerpuff4ever4 жыл бұрын
Making sure to have Black and Hispanic and trans characters in the coven should have opened up legitimate conversations about experiences and the anger and otherness that comes with those classifications but instead they got throw away lines of acknowledgement and the coven as a whole got pushed aside to pay attention to the single character without anything to really complain about outside of being the new kid. I really liked Lily but why were we only told that Lorde is trans but didn’t see any of that make its way into the narrative? Why did Tabbie have to mention wishing she had more black friends and fearing for her family in a wedged in game of 2 truths 1 lie but we get no displays or causes for that fear or the loneliness that comes with not having a community that understands your specific experiences? And was there even anything _distinct_ said about Frankie?? I missed the friendship, I missed the other characters having lives and reasons behind their otherness, I missed interactions that weren’t just screaming about the new spell the group mastered. Overall, I thought the movie was cute - loved the costuming, the aesthetics, even some of the heavy handed representation - but it got so caught up in making sure it connected to The Craft that it left behind it’s characters for the sake of a weak plot. It was also just generally disappointing that they introduced a magic villain to represent the patriarchy that ultimately had way more details about her than even _slightly_ realistic and in the end the girls don’t see any true consequence of abusing magick or not trusting their friendship.
@tarinblanding15844 жыл бұрын
I hope the 3rd movie gives us more details about the rest of the girls in the coven besides Lily
@spiderbits29233 жыл бұрын
Old men get mad when the objects of their desire step out of line. I'm not at all surprised it invokes anger out of certain people.
@nikkiland4 жыл бұрын
Lmao I never thought about that but Chronicle really is Juice and The Crafts baby
@ivanpabon27414 жыл бұрын
nope
@reesrowlands84303 жыл бұрын
NIKKI LAND It’s more like Juice and Akira not the craft
@ivanpabon27413 жыл бұрын
@@reesrowlands8430 thank you
@audreystrother11633 жыл бұрын
This is the main problem I have with teen/college movies now. They’re too focused on “sending a message” instead of developing an original story with fully-realized characters and letting the message(s) of the story grow out from those elements in an organic way. All the ham-fisted social/political melodrama feels more like a PSA instead of an actual story and ironically, it pushes people away from potentially learning something valuable bc you spent so much time telling them how they should feel instead of showing them, which is why The Craft and The Craft: Legacy don’t even compare. It's just lazy writing.
@Nightman221k4 жыл бұрын
I feel like The Craft Legacy should have a director’s cut version. And I am kinda mixed in my opinion of the original movie. My boyfriend love it to death but I feel like it was sort of meandering during the middle of the film and some aspects of the friendship felt unexplored which is unfortunate cause the actresses have amazing chemistry. I love the performances of the original I just wish the movie utilized its time better.
@smc42774 жыл бұрын
dang your pfp is really cool, where is it from?
@LaneMaxfield4 жыл бұрын
My biggest complaint about The Craft is that there isn't an explanation for why Sarah sees that the spells are going too far and backfiring, but Bonnie and Rochelle don't. Rochelle even gets a scene where she's shocked by how far her revenge spell has gone, which really should have been building to something... and then she just blindly goes along with Nancy's power trip. I think it would have been a better narrative payoff if Bonnie, Rochelle and Sarah had teamed up against Nancy and the owner of the witch shop had become their fourth coven member, and the ending implies they have taken her on as a teacher so they use magic responsibly in the future.
@kittykittybangbang9367 Жыл бұрын
There was a deleted scene where Nancy uses Bonnie and Rochelle's insecurity against them, so I guess that explains why Rochelle went with Nancy. Here's the scene kzbin.info/www/bejne/iKizd4mOlKpsn9E
@giljawetz52793 жыл бұрын
The Craft is a masterpiece. I’ve had many people look at me funny when I say that, and then we watch it and they’re like “yup, masterpiece.”
@oliverford5367 Жыл бұрын
It's one of the best examples of a character-driven film
@vanessaajohn4 жыл бұрын
I literally was just wondering when you were going to say some thing about the craft legacy. A minute later here we are
@zombieedrea4 жыл бұрын
Just wanna say you’re probably my favorite film/media essayist on this site because you talk about so many great, subversive movies that really aren’t getting talked about enough, and I hunger for any voice that isn’t a white dude on this hellsite. You just have really fucking great taste. And your voice and delivery is always so calm and chill, almost like you’re just having a cup of tea with a friend and you’re just shooting the shit. I hope your channel continues to grow. 💖
@hoaxghost32684 жыл бұрын
Also with Bewitched, it inspired Sally the Witch, one of the first shoujo anime out there and stated to be a sort of inspiration for the creation of the magical girl genre.
@steveb1155 Жыл бұрын
"In the end, she kills no one." *Remembers that one guy.* Uh-- *Remembers he's kind of a predator.* Yeah, you right.
@Asummersdaydreamer144 жыл бұрын
Legitimately spent almost 2 hours in a library historical witchcraft livestream this evening. Thanks for your work and probable lack of sleep.
@ernie39 Жыл бұрын
"Steven Strait was a model," yes, but he was also Warren Peace in Sky High (2005). His contributions to cinema cannot go unmentioned. (/lighthearted)
@thebirdandthecricket4 жыл бұрын
I was SO confused about the period scene!! I totally thought it was a nose bleed tf. Who counldn't feel that???
@azuki_O3 жыл бұрын
I would kinda understand that if it was directed by a man (Carrie's opening scene...?) But it was a woman. It seems too unrealistic....
@dippedinrice24723 жыл бұрын
How the girls just abandoned Lily when she used the love spell was truly the definition of friendship 🙄 she’s bawling and clearly remorseful in the bathroom scene but they all like sorry girl ya binded! like they’ve been doing witchcraft for years and she makes one mistake? and they outcast her without even investigating any other possible outcomes.
@thelittletaosena51764 жыл бұрын
I just want to point out that anarchy isn't the absence of order, it's actually just direct democracy and the absence of power structures (ie hierarchy ie oppression). Check out Thought Slime here on KZbin to learn more about it. He's the reason I identify as an anarcho-communist now.
@katherinemorelle71154 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Anarchism means without rulers. Not without rules. I’ll also add Mexie and Non Compete to your list.
@halfbloodprincess9894 жыл бұрын
@@katherinemorelle7115 But who would enforce those rules? - Sure there are some rules that an anarchist society would held up (let's say: a girl gets raped in a village, everybody in the village likes the girl, justice would ensue probably). - But what about rules for deep seeted problems that the majority doesn't really care about (e.g. an American anarchy would have a big racism problem, there would be rules to protect black people on paper, but who would care about those rules?) If you have rulers you can hold them to account (vote them out of office and put them to jail, easy peasy), but you can't hold the public to account. A dictatorship of the proletariat is a very cruel system.
@katherinemorelle71154 жыл бұрын
@@halfbloodprincess989 I suggest having a look at the ACAB video by Thought Slime, and also some videos on how an ana society could work by both Non Compete and Re-Education.
@halfbloodprincess9894 жыл бұрын
@@katherinemorelle7115 I don't know who Re-Education is, however I know Thought Slime and Non Compete. These guys are presenting utopias as a realistic society. I don't think I need to suffer through an ACAB Thought Slime video, I'm good thanks. You could try to explain your rules-but-no-rulers plan by yourself.
@katherinemorelle71154 жыл бұрын
@@halfbloodprincess989 or... I could not do that. Why waste my time on some stranger on KZbin? (one who really should just read another damn book). I’m not writing a full academic essay explaining anarchism for you. Do your own damn reading. Start with Kropotkin. Or, you could write your own essay trying to justify the current system. Tell me- how does neoliberalism work to protect vulnerable groups? Thinking that the current system is a fair and just one is far more utopic than any anarchist theory.
@thecharredwitch4 жыл бұрын
When she got her period I was like “girl! Really? I get paranoid when I sit down too long and my butt feels cold when I get up”😂😂😂
@stonersiren4 жыл бұрын
i always knew charmed was basically living off the craft's (and buffy's) success, but i never knew they wanted an actual the craft show and didnt get it. makes soo much sense tho
@6thCircleTattoos4 жыл бұрын
One of my top 3 movie quotes I use is from the craft. Everytime I have a friend wearing a new ring, I grab their hand, look at it and say " what a beautiful ring. It was your mathers". With the accent of course. They just look at me like I'm crazy
@CaseyStraits3 ай бұрын
Funniest thing I’ve read all day
@MyssBlewm4 жыл бұрын
Hollywood never knew what to do with Taylor Kitsch outside of Friday Night Lights. Happy Halloween everyone! Just making a comment for the algorithm. 👻🧡🖤🧡🖤🎃🎃🎃
@ethicalcheeze14074 жыл бұрын
He was pretty solid in John Carter, but Disney totally fucked the marketing for that one
@AlexSmith-gr3el4 жыл бұрын
He's pretty great as the villain in American assassin
@ethicalcheeze14074 жыл бұрын
@@AlexSmith-gr3el too bad the rest of the movie sucked ass, lol
@zombieedrea4 жыл бұрын
He was really good in The Normal Heart, and I’ve heard good things about his performance as the creepy Waco cult dude. Honestly I think the way Disney fucked him after John Carter hurt his career, which is too bad. He’s talented. He just might not have had access to good projects and was often overlooked.
@jud3th4 жыл бұрын
your segment about chronicle spawning from Juice and the Craft was so amazingly edited i got chills! Chronicle was my very first Dane movie as well, i also binged his entire repertoire right after ^___^ such a charming story, definitely deserves a rewatch
@chloewebb55264 жыл бұрын
Wait, one of the girls is trans? But we don't get to learn anything about her.. Then wtf is the point?! Oh... That's the point - Points... Edit: I just want to see media start doing it, and doing it right. There's still more transphobia made in media than positive true to life portrayals... It causes damage when a trans person denies their truth until something shows them it's okay, I had years of terrible fear, confusion, and suicidal depression that could've been avoided had there been something telling me, "it's okay, look at this person, they're normal and you can relate to them. It's going to be okay.💜". That's all I needed. That's it. It's not this movies responsibility, but are we so unwanted in people's stories and minds that No One wants to write us as those characters at all, ever?
@Fraxinus_a4 жыл бұрын
Right, hollyweird out here just trying to check boxes instead of checking their scripts for any depth and character development. Smh.
@rattyeely4 жыл бұрын
Sometimes it's good to show trans girls just existing, instead of being used for drama
@princessnikoblackwood40414 жыл бұрын
@@rattyeely that would have been wonderful but we didn't get that ; we get that line and then we get a little bit of a scene when she changes the bully's coat rainbow, very lazy - it would have been great to have anything else to build on but the only distinguishing quality she has is being trans ~ i deserved better lol
@princessnikoblackwood40414 жыл бұрын
@Trashlie Mezzer she's openly transgender, so i don't think she's worried about being typecast, and she can very easily play cisgender characters.
@princessnikoblackwood40414 жыл бұрын
@Trashlie Mezzer Zoey Luna could very easily play cisgender characters, i don't see that happening to her ; if she'd wanted to, she could have never let her trans status be known to begin with.
@alpaca32164 жыл бұрын
I'd like to know your take on series with similar themes like AHS: Coven or The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.
@FairyRosee_4 жыл бұрын
Not gonna lie, between The Craft and Harry Potter, I started doing witchcraft as a child after finding some spells on "Magick" sites in the late 90's.
@kittykittybangbang93672 жыл бұрын
The funny thing about Harry Potter is that I've heard that it was inspired by some element of Christianity
@SerenaWhatever3 жыл бұрын
The Craft was my favorite movie when I was growing up and was one of the primary reasons I got interested in paganism as a tween (I don't practice any more tho), and Legacy feels like such a hollow, fanfic-y attempt to capture the essence of the original without even knowing what made it great in the first place. It's very um.....Chilling Adventures of Sabrina x Mean Girls 2
@Hoshikage8694 жыл бұрын
Good video, I enjoyed it. Minor nitpick, but the use of the term "anarchist" in reference to the character in The Chronicle reinforces a lot of popular misconceptions and outright misinformation about what anarchism is. Anarchism is about finding ways to reshape society by getting rid of unnecessary hierarchies (capitalism, racism, sexism, the state, etc.), and building alternative forms of societal organization, not rampant destruction. While violence may be necessary to overcome the state's violence, most of what anarchists actually do is doing mutual aid to help those in need in their communities. I normally wouldn't care about this, but I've seen politicians on both sides use anarchists as scapegoats this year.
@Toxihex4 жыл бұрын
Yeah but just as none of the currently explored hierarchies work, neither does anarchism because the people are flawed. It's either their inherent capacity or their need for and lack of proper guidance that fucks it all up so we have never been able to get it right. However, nobody will admit they're not equally valuable to another or god forbid :O a part of the obstacle before an actual substantial intellectual progress humanity could achieve. It's funny because the very people who are a solid part of this obstacle attribute the phenomenon to skin colour, sexuality and even somehow fucking gender among other things. People have shown time and time again they can't tell who the cancers in their system are and always witch hunting the wrong ones over shallow common denominators in a childish attempt to clear up the obstacle. People aren't at a place in evolution where they can expect to follow a political idea as if the fault is solely in the other ideas and it not having disastrous consequences when it's up to the obstacle components to keep it going.
@Hoshikage8694 жыл бұрын
@@Toxihex I recommend looking into currently anarchist or anarchist-adjacent projects (ex: Rojava, neo-Zapatistas), anarchist projects of the past, and Native American and other indigenous social organizations that lasted hundreds of years until European colonialism crushed them. Much of what people think of as "human nature" in pseudoscience from the 1800s trying to essentialize the way Europeans ran societies to all people. In truth, people's natures are shaped by material conditions and the societies they currently live in. I would also strongly recommend reading some actual anarchist literature because the points you bring up have already been covered by many. Have a good day.
@Toxihex4 жыл бұрын
@@Hoshikage869 Most people's societal and to a very large extent brain function (for example people who don't grow up around speech are incapable of ever developing their speech centers enough to be able to have a conversation like the one we are having right now for instance) is shaped by the conditions they live in, but not everyone is shaped the same. The "exceptions" that are for the better shouldn't be the exceptions. Everyone but them should be trimmed away and then rinse and repeat until they become the exceptions, so they can be few enough to be quarantined without the need for any permanent trimming. A person who can't guide their own adaptability or doesn't even have the capacity to understand complex emotional intelligence can't be equated to someone who has the potential to be a valid part of an at least functional society, had the existence of one such society not been hindered by the lack of intelligent quality control, ironically carried out by ones that need to be controlled in quality. You'll always hear "but how can you judge for who is quality and who isn't" because to them it doesn't sound like something someone could detect, and considering the many failed attempts of people trying to identify and deal with what they see as the obstacles we aren't gonna see it happen anytime soon. Until it does, the only thing that matters is preserving the freedom for it to begin thriving unplucked if we're lucky and don't cause too much destruction before it does. Thinking anything revolutionary will happen for the better without causing a major disaster of otherwise good intentions down the line is naive and wishful thinking. I'd advise anyone and everyone not to waste their time on politics from the standpoint of wanting something that will actually work, the best we can hope for is the biggest damage control. People should be careful not to derive beliefs from technicalities that seem to carry the obvious because perception is tricky.
@kittykittybangbang93672 жыл бұрын
@@Hoshikage869 I see people define anarchy in very different ways, and each definition is different from each other. My opinion: Political labels shouldn't matter just do what would make something better.
@sophrin98764 жыл бұрын
It's probably my first youtube comment in years. I guess I'm too shy and never really know what to say. But I liked this video so much that I had to type it. Thank you so much for making this, it's amazing! Really love your channel overall as well while we're at it. Alright, see everyone in two more years!
@Leftistattheparty4 жыл бұрын
You're fast becoming one of my more interesting subs on cinema. Thank you for the work that you do.
@FireyCurls222 жыл бұрын
When I was 11 All I cared about was that the guys in the Covenant were hot and they had powers. That was the driving force behind my love for that movie and why I still own it today 😂
@haggish_4 жыл бұрын
there have been very few times when a piece of media (be it movie, tv show, music, photograph) immediately resonates with me so strongly it becomes integrated into my psyche. i have a clear, vivid memory of seeing the cover of the craft in the video store (yes, i'm that old) and just *knowing* i had to watch it. i'm talking love-at-first-sight, must-have-known-it-in-a-previous-life type of connection. i've seen it countless times over the years and i'm still able to find a new perspective or learn something from it. it's always there when i need it, and i'll always love it for it. (also, absolutely killer playlist)
@rachellydiab4 жыл бұрын
legit was gonna go to a screening of Legacy this afternoon, but I’m just gonna watch this instead lol
@prettysavage65694 жыл бұрын
“It’s like the shining down there” 😂 You ain’t wrong
@onfire77753 жыл бұрын
Lol
@PacoPeekaPoo4 жыл бұрын
Your music choices in these videos are absolutely immaculate
THIS VIDEO WAS SO SATISFYING. AN ENTIRE WEB OF CONNECTION WITHIN MY HEART. I AM THE MOTHER. OOF.
@bessdavies64404 жыл бұрын
I have VERY heavy periods (despite being almost 30 😑) and a few times it was so bad that very big chunks (people with periods will know what I'm talking about. Gotta love 'em chunks...) would come out and literally explode, either because I was sitting down or riding my bycicle. One time they leaked through and around the pad, through my panties and my leggins and consequently on my bycicle seat. Personally I thought it was hilarious, this shit happens to me all the time I ain't even bothered anymore. It still happens to my mum and she's in her early 50s.... But BRO YOU FEEL IT. There's NO WAY you can sit in liquid and not feel the wetness.
@fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan47484 жыл бұрын
I hear period cups reduce flow
@bb-ih9hg4 жыл бұрын
Same though. Like I started my period when I was 8, and I have horrible cramps and bleed a lot too. So when I was about 11 or 12, I stood up really fast in the cafeteria and like, the most insane amount of blood just poured forth - and even with a pad, I FELT IT. I FELT ALL OF IT, EVEN AS IT POOLED NEARLY TO MY KNEES. Every person with a period knows when they're bleeding like that! That's like not noticing your nose is bleeding or snot is dripping down your face. Smh.
@nunugirlswag1094 жыл бұрын
@@bb-ih9hg actually it’s quite easy for someone to not realize they are bleeding, from nose or from your period. Had a friend in middle school that had an accident and didn’t know until another friend had pointed it out to her before they left class (thankfully no one else noticed) and had a friend whose nose started bleeding while we were at the beach (he was having the time of his life and didn’t realize until I pointed it out) so I think it depends on the person and what the situation is. If you’re someone who doesn’t really pay attention to yourself or your surroundings then it’s actually easy
@LovetheLuvRecords3 жыл бұрын
Charmed LEGIT was the most behaved and RESPECTED child of this one 😍
@cheshirekat82732 жыл бұрын
I love "The Craft" even more, now, knowing that it made old, white men angry and desperate to trash the film.
@kittykittybangbang9367 Жыл бұрын
Same with Turing Red
@DCMarvelMultiverse4 жыл бұрын
It is to witches what Lost Boys is to vampires.
@awhimsyreader9015Ай бұрын
I literally watched the Craft today after watching The Lost Boys yesterday and I definitely noticed some similarities in the movies though admittedly I did like The Craft more
@sking07074 жыл бұрын
I am so glad I found your vid/channel. Your in depth analysis of everything is beautifully done and the video that you put together to go with it was just *chef kiss*. I can’t wait to binge your prev vids and look fwd to your new ones.
@chioma9164 жыл бұрын
its the fka twigs for me!
@AvgJane194 жыл бұрын
That was it for me too!
@chioma9164 жыл бұрын
@@AvgJane19 love your name 💀
@quillpen8152 жыл бұрын
Ty yhara for bringin this back 😭
@SYNC4ex4 жыл бұрын
"I'm gonna go watch Bring It On 16 times." I feel that. Same.
@viewerFAC3 жыл бұрын
What I loved about this movie was that its characters and their dynamics felt real, this felt a lot like me and my small group of friends (minus the witch craft, natch). It was like a slice of life + twist to explore the character's choices, consequences and their reactions. I think this also showed how short sighted (or biased) critic's views are, they expected a teen romance, or a horror movie or a comedy because the main character were teenage girls. But this was a drama, the supernatural bits were just an impetus for the characters to explore their behavior.
@sabrina00134 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad I found your channel. You're incredibly good at articulating these thoughts. I wish you were more popular
@talaofthevalley2 жыл бұрын
That period scene comes off as something a male director/writer with the barest idea of how a period works would have written. I had heavy flow as a teen and kid, and even went a few months *without* pads cause I didn't know how to bring it up, and while my underwear looked like a crime scene and my pants got stained, it never even dripped down my thighs. It makes the scene where the other girls comfort her over her heavy flow feel weird, cause that's not a heavy flow that's a medical emergency.
@skt16114 жыл бұрын
Official petition to rename it Blum Bloom Blah House
@Christine13093 жыл бұрын
I LOVE this movie so much. I discovered paganism and wicca at my local library at the age of 15 (1992). Looking back, there MUST have been an adult influencing this libraries large selection of books on the topic. I threw myself into this fascinating and female empowered spiritual life. Finding other witches in 1995 without an internet connection in Colorado for a shy girl? Felt impossible and I felt isolated as I privately fantasized about full moon parties and covens of like minded friends When The Craft came out, it felt SO REAL and accurate and truly made me feel like my spiritual journey had been affirmed. This movie, and the soundtrack are still favorites for me.
@beansfebreeze4 жыл бұрын
I think witches are cool in the sense that I'm glad people have a religion that isn't just used to harm people.
@KoruDesuKa4 жыл бұрын
Practicing witch here, would like to respectfully make the distinction that “witchcraft” isn’t a religion unto itself. I think of it more of like any craft, like art; practiced in many ways, settings, either in conjunction with or separate from religion altogether. There are Christian witches (ie, all of Catholicism, intentional or not). Also witches like Tesla, who, through exploration of the laws of the universe under the guise of science and metaphysics together, never to my knowledge sought to define a creator or ascribe a dogmatic cause (but still: Dude had more tangible and measurable magick than my work with magick visual art, incorporating sacred geometry, music and personal symbolism/accidental self promotion to watch tech-knowledgy.maGIF on my channel for reference, but really I’m a nobody no pressure) TL;DR I’m a witch, and I have no religion, but view all religions as containing elements of truth, but will always work towards coming to my own understanding of the cosmos, and developing my own personal spiritual amalgamation and understanding of God, experientially. Anyone can do the same, without assigning a set mythology/narrative to your very real expression.
@beansfebreeze4 жыл бұрын
@@KoruDesuKa Religion doesn't just mean having a god. The definition is just "the belief in some force that controls reality." If Scientology can get called a religion with what they believe then anybody using terms like "tech-knowledgy.maGIF" is in the same boat.
@GullibleTarget4 жыл бұрын
@@beansfebreeze is that a definitive and conclusive definition in english? Because religion has several connotations in my language. I would say that Buddhism isn't a religion but a a practice, for instance. But that is open to interpretation Since there is a dogma and moral code and hierarchy, it often does get labeled as a religion. I'm with the witch on this one. Witchcraft is a practice. I'm carribean. Some of the stuff my family does, would be seen as witchcraft. The rituals themselves are practiced but it is the christian God they believe in. They are christians. Christianity is their religion. Witchcraft is their practice.
@LucianCorrvinus3 жыл бұрын
Harm...heal...its all subjective. Our Gods are various, not all are about doing 'Good'...and neither are we...
@KoruDesuKa3 жыл бұрын
@@LucianCorrvinus I completely agree, with the caveat of completely disagreeing. 😂 Our Gods and the singularity it comes from are by nature Good, that’s the only rule. From that perspective, there is no true evil, only that which we define as bad from a limited consciousness, but which ultimately comes from and results into the greater Good. As above, so below. Your nature is the nature of reality. Mine is Love, but damnit if I don’t need some Satanic/brutal demonic forces to give me purpose.
@renansouza21954 жыл бұрын
Please never stop making this kind of videos!! You're so creative and your voice is so soothing 😻😍
@KDbelieves4 жыл бұрын
If you want to watch a good series on witches watch a web series called JuJu: The Web Series. It's about 4 black witches and their older mentor. It's based on African spirituality over the more popular pagan witches but it's so good. I think all the characters have their own individuality and flaws and the story is not cartoonish at all. I wish they had the funding to become a Netflix tv show. They simply lack funding, but that's it. Speaking of Netflix, there is another show called Siempre Bruja. It's a show about a black witch during slavery who was about to be burned for being a witch. She escapes by traveling to the futre. I also like this show because (while the premise is not grounded in reality), it's very realistic.
@tallsockclown4 жыл бұрын
Okay- but the music you have in the background throughout are songs I actually use to meditate lol, love that. This was really well put together and I'm sure a ton of work went into it, great job! I also really appreciate the attention focused on how real witchcraft is typically poorly presented, and you were very respectful and well spoken when speaking on it. Wonderful video!
@SecretTwilightGirl4 жыл бұрын
I have such vague memories of The Covenant I didn’t even realize they were supposed to be witches. I fully thought they were vampires or demons with those flying powers and black eyes LMAO. Also, the only thing I remember is how even as a kid I fet like the beef btwn Sebastian Stan and the Straight guy was less about that random girl and more about the intense sexual tension they had with each other.
@Arrrrrrrrrrbbbbbbbbbb4 жыл бұрын
Can we talk about about how great your music choices are? In every video the music is perfect
@AM199254 жыл бұрын
i normally don't like the criticism 'this would have been better as a show' because it implies a messy film couldn't have just been fixed with tighter writing, but instead pacing and plot issues can only be solved by letting a bloated, unfocused mess play out over 10+ episodes - but in the case of the craft: legacy, i would genuinely prefer to watch their friendship develop over time, in a more slow-burny format that gives each of the girls a turn in the spotlight. take away the blumhouse influence, even take away 'the craft' branding, plop these four pretty charming actresses in a slightly trashy but emotionally earnest witchy teen show and i'd probably watch 6 seasons of it even with the janky CGI & outdated references
@Lexi-wi4it3 жыл бұрын
My teacher in fourth grade told us that the best writing advice she had was to think of story ideas as a watermelon. You don't want to tell a story about the entire watermelon, you want to focus on one seed. The newest Craft movie is a watermelon movie. It's too much all at once, just like you said. It, just like every other story in existence, needed to be about one singular seed, all of its pitfalls can be attributed to that same common problem.
@noirlux56094 жыл бұрын
43 minutes? Wow you spoil us 💞
@AvgJane194 жыл бұрын
She's fr fr too good to us 😫
@zoewilliard8204 жыл бұрын
You are so well spoken and knowledgeable! Listening to this video makes me so happy :)
@rankushrenada4 жыл бұрын
I can't help but notice that when the craft was about girls, they work hard, study and learn magic because magic is a thing ANYONE can use if they learn the code but with boys it's more of a "You are genetically predisposed to this", huh, wonder why
@LucianCorrvinus3 жыл бұрын
Because, while any girl can have the potential to be a Witch, being that it is understood that a Woman is inherently mysterious or dangerous or what have you...a boy spontaneously having those qualities is a much less believable prospect. Therefore males will be given a magical ancestor as a automatic to sell thier ability. But you should note most female Witches will be given same. But not always, and not to the piont you'll see it applied to males...