Previously at the ICA - Films

Jiří Sádek, The Noonday Witch, 2016

BFI London Film Festival: The Noonday Witch

8 Oct 2016

BFI Film Festival: 245 features. 74 countries. 15 cinemas. 12 days. One Festival.

Taking inspiration from an old Czech folk tale, The Noonday Witch tells the story of Eliska, a single mother who relocates to the rural village where her late husband grew up. Cautiously evading sexual advances from the town’s menfolk, Eliska keeps the fact of her husband’s death a secret from her young daughter. But when the truth finally emerges, so does a mysterious spectral figure who appears to be slowly closing in on the pair. There is a teasing hint of Jennifer Kent’s The Babadook to this modern day fable of motherhood and the metaphysical, but while that film was all ominous shadows and funereal darkness, Jiří Sádek’s bewitching debut is a rare example of the sun-drenched supernatural, with most of the film basked in the blinding glow of natural daylight.

Not since Philip Ridley’s The Reflecting Skin have the sunlit expanses of golden cornfields been so infused with a palpable, inexplicable dread.

(Notes by Michael Blyth)

The Noonday Witch (Polednice), dir. Jiří Sádek, Czech Republic 2016, 90 mins, cert. 15.

60th BFI London Film Festival trailer

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