The Naked Witch
The Naked Witch is a color, regional 1964 American horror film, produced by Claude Alexander, and written and directed by Larry Buchanan.[2] It stars Libby Hall, Robert Short and Jo Maryman. The film was shot in 1960 and has a copyright date of 1961 but was not released until 1964. It tells the story of a university student who travels to Texas, where he inadvertently restores a dead witch to life. She then takes revenge on the Schöennig family, one of whom, her lover, had denounced her a century earlier. The student falls under the spell of the witch but recovers in time to save Kirska, the only remaining Schöennig, before he himself kills the witch again.
The Naked Witch | |
---|---|
Libby Hall as the witch of the film | |
Directed by | Larry Buchanan Claude Alexander |
Produced by | Larry Buchanan |
Written by | Larry Buchanan Claude Alexander |
Starring | Libby Hall Robert Short Jo Maryman |
Music by | Ray Plagens |
Production company | Alexander Enterprises |
Release date | 1964 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $8,000[1] |
Box office | $80,000[1] |
The Naked Witch was financed by a Texan drive-in theater owner who wanted a movie with much nudity, but the actual amount of nudity in the film is negligible. The film was considered to be a success, bringing in box office receipts of $80,000 and helping to launch Buchanan's career.[1]
The film is often confused with another regional movie, also titled The Naked Witch (aka The Naked Temptress), a lost film directed by Andy Milligan in New Jersey in 1967.[3]
Plot
A university student (Robert Short) is researching his thesis on the "thoroughly German" villages of modern-day central Texas. He's on his way to Luckenbach - where people speak German more often than English - when his car runs out of gas. He walks into town and meets Kirska Schöennig (Jo Maryman), who takes him to the Schöennig Inn, the hotel run by her grandfather, Hans. While none of the older residents of the town will talk to the student about the "Luckenbach Witch," Kirska loans him a book about her.
Learning from the book that the witch is buried near the inn, the student goes to the cemetery and opens her shallow grave by hand. He removes from her mummified remains the spike that was driven through her. After he returns in haste to the inn, she rises naked from her grave, quite intact and intent on taking revenge on the Schöennigs, the descendants of her lover, the married man who denounced her as a witch a century earlier.
The witch steals the stake and goes to the bedroom of Kirska. She rips Kirska's nightgown off her and puts it on before setting out in search of the other two remaining Schöennigs, Hans and Franz. She quickly dispatches them both. The student finds the witch bathing nude in a creek and falls under her spell. But after spending the night with her, he snaps out of it and decides that it is his responsibility to stop her.
As the witch magically summons Kirska to the graveyard, the student rushes in and struggles with the witch. She falls upon the stake, dead again.
Cast
- Libby Hall as the Naked Witch
- Robert Short as the Student
- Jo Maryman as Kirska Schöennig
- Denis Adams
- Charles West
- Howard Ware
- Jack Herman
- Marilyn Pope
- Der Saengerbund Children's Choir
- Rea Forbes (uncredited)
- Gary Owens (uncredited narrator of the prologue)
Production
The Naked Witch was shot in Luckenbach, Texas on a budget of $8000. It falls into film critic Brian Albright's category of a regional film as one that is "(a) filmed outside the general professional and geographical confines of Hollywood; (b) produced independently; and (c) made with a cast and crew made up primarily of residents of the states in which the film was shot."[3]
The film begins not with the first scene of the plot, but rather with a "lengthy narration about the history of witchcraft," dramatically voiced over by an uncredited Gary Owens.[3]
Distribution
According to undated film posters, The Naked Witch was produced and distributed by Alexander Enterprises as "an Adult picture." An advertisement, also without a date, shows the film as the second feature on an R-rated double-bill with The Legend of Witch Hollow (1969)[4] (aka The Witchmaker, The Witchmaster and Witchkill).[5]
Although filmed in color, black-and-white prints of The Naked Witch were distributed to some theaters in 1964. For home viewing, Sinister Cinema released a black-and-white video, although without the film's complete footage. A full-color version dubbed from the 35mm original print was released by Something Weird Video.[6]
Reception
Academic film scholar Heather Greene writes that the film was part of the "growing sexploitation or 'nudie' industry" when it was made. However, the greater significance of The Naked Witch is that it is "the first to use the resurrected witch narrative and the ghost horror witch." In the years after the film, "the resurrected witch theme becomes increasingly popular and eventually dominates witch films by the early 2000s (e.g., The Blair Witch Project, 1999)."[7]
References
- "Higher Ground" by Tony Osborne, From: Film & History: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Film and Television Studies Volume 39.1 (Spring 2009) accessed 26 March 2013
- Craig, Rob (2007). The Films of Larry Buchanan: A Critical Examination. McFarland & Company. pp. 32–41. ISBN 978-0786429820.
- Albright, Brian (2012). Regional Horror Films 1958-1990: A State-by-State Guide with Interviews. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co. Inc. pp. 2, 239, 306. ISBN 9780786472277.
- "Film Posters". The Tell Tale Mind. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
- "The Witchmaker - USA, 1969". Horrorpedia. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
- "Naked Witch, The (1964)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- Greene, Heather (2018). Bell, Book and Camera: A Critical History of Witches in American Film and Television. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co. Inc. p. 108. ISBN 9781476662527.