haste pulser

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In the thrilling tale of "Stare at the Witch Part 1," readers are taken on a suspenseful journey through a small, mysterious town. The story revolves around the arrival of a new neighbor who is rumored to be a witch. From the very beginning, the protagonist, Sarah, feels a peculiar sense of unease whenever she sees the new neighbor. This unease is magnified when strange occurrences begin plaguing the town, leading Sarah to suspect that the witch may be to blame. Amidst whispers and speculation, Sarah takes it upon herself to investigate the situation and uncover the truth. As she delves deeper into the mystery, she learns that not everything is what it seems in this idyllic town.


The real charm, however, was that Practical Magic was all of those things, which is why audiences are still bewitched by the movie, especially during spooky season, and its weird mix of humor, horror and, especially, the heart in the bond between Sally and Gilly.

The real charm, however, was that Practical Magic was all of those things, which is why audiences are still bewitched by the movie, especially during spooky season, and its weird mix of humor, horror and, especially, the heart in the bond between Sally and Gilly. The spell is successful-but the man s subsequent magical obsession, which eventually drives the woman to exhaustion and remorse and nearly suffocates her, is never even hinted at.

Nicole kidman witcg

As she delves deeper into the mystery, she learns that not everything is what it seems in this idyllic town. With each passing day, Sarah becomes more entangled in a web of secrets and dangers, and the line between reality and superstition starts to blur. The story ends on a cliffhanger, leaving readers eagerly anticipating Part 2 to find out what happens next.

How Practical Magic Pissed Off a Real-Life Witch

Twenty-five years later, the film’s director talks that famous midnight-margaritas scene—“Everybody got shit-faced”—and the magic consultant who threatened to sue Warner Bros. over the production: “They said, ‘Fuck this,’ and wrote her a check.”

October 6, 2023 Courtesy of Everett Collection. Save this story Save this story

Practical Magic, a heady blend of ’90s romantic comedy, domestic violence horror, and supernatural trickery, is perhaps best encapsulated by a single moment: “You have the worst taste in men,” Sandra Bullock’s Sally groans as she helps her sister, Gillian (Nicole Kidman), bury the evil ex they’ve killed in the backyard of their magical mansion.

Twenty-five years after the film’s release, its synopsis remains spellbindingly dense. Bullock and Kidman play sisters bound by a curse that befalls any man who falls in love with a woman in their family. After their father perishes and their mother dies of a broken heart, the sisters are raised in an enviable cliffside estate by their wonderfully wicked aunts (Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest, in roles originally envisioned for Vanessa Redgrave and Julie Christie). Sally vows to never fall in love, while Gillian flings herself toward romance.

The sisters spend several years apart—Sally marries and has two children (Evan Rachel Wood and Alexandra Artrip) with a man (Mark Feuerstein) whose demise arrives as predicted, and Gillian gets entangled with her abusive boyfriend, Jimmy (Goran Visnjic). The pair kill Jimmy after he attempts to kidnap them, but his spirit lingers, requiring a full-on exorcism. Oh, and things are further complicated by the investigation into Jimmy’s murder by Aidan Quinn’s Gary Hallet, whom Sally discovers she’s falling in love with.

Suffice it to say, the movie is a lot. “I remember Bob Daly, who was co-CEO of Warner Brothers—at our premiere, he sat one row in front [of me],” the film’s director, Griffin Dunne, tells Vanity Fair. “After a very lighthearted scene with girls giggling and being hilarious, [we were] having them dig up a body from a rose bush and stick needles in its eyes. He turned to the person next to him and went, ‘I wish the kid would just pick a tone.’”

Critics tended to agree. Despite opening at number one, the film, adapted from Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel with a screenplay by Robin Swicord, Akiva Goldsman, and Adam Brooks, was deemed “too scary for children and too childish for adults,” by the likes of Roger Ebert. Entertainment Weekly called it “a witch comedy so slapdash, plodding, and muddled it seems to have had a hex put on it.”

Dunne, son of longtime VF contributor Dominick Dunne and an actor best known for 1985’s After Hours, never helmed another studio film. But in the decades since its release, Practical Magic has morphed into a cult classic, beloved particularly by women for its enviable soundtrack (Faith Hill’s “This Kiss”! Joni Mitchell’s “A Case of You,”! Two original Stevie Nicks tracks!) and themes of sisterhood. “Dealing with several different tones in the same film is not that unusual anymore,” says Dunne. “When I did American Werewolf in London, it was the same reaction. People were really upset that there were laughs in a horror movie. Now you can’t make a horror movie without getting laughs.”

Fervor around the film gets particularly heightened around Halloween, Dunne says. “A little name-drop here, just two nights ago I was in my local restaurant in the Hudson Valley. Paul Rudd is one of my neighbors, and he came over and said, ‘My son’s girlfriend is obsessed with the movie. Can I bring her over? She wants to just talk to you about it.’ She joined our table and asked me the same questions you’re asking—just devoured every tiny detail about it. That was enormously satisfying.”

The script has so many holes and jumps it seems already to have been cut for commercials. Most of the dark psychological shadows of the original book have been sacrificed; even the predictable haunting has been given a cute suburban carpool-ish touch. As young girls, Sally and Gillian witness a woman begging their aunts for a love potion that will drive another woman's husband crazy. (She's supposed to be just one of the scores of townspeople who creep up to the aunts' back door for help, suggesting the witches' very complex relationship with their neighbors; but, hey, no dark secrets here.) The spell is successful-but the man's subsequent magical obsession, which eventually drives the woman to exhaustion and remorse and nearly suffocates her, is never even hinted at. "Be careful what you wish for" is supposed to be a warning, but instead it's the excuse for casting Aidan Quinn as the lawman tracking Gillian's missing cowboy.
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