The Columbus Dispatch

‘The Craft: Legacy’ casts a new spell

- Mark Kennedy

More than a few Halloweens ago – two dozen to be exact – came a film that looked like a treat but ended up as a trick.

“The Craft” was about four teenage witches who eventually turned their powers against each other and lost everything, leaving the film with a convention­al, conservati­ve message: Don’t unleash your power. It was deflating.

Now comes – well, its not entirely clear. A reboot? A sequel? A continuati­on and a re-imagining? It doesn’t matter at all. Blumhouse’s “The Craft: Legacy,” available on digital platforms now, is a vastly better, smartly crafted version that’s woke, feminist and very 2020. It’s the story’s best self.

Director and writer Zoe ListerJone­s leaves little nods to the original 1996 film – snakes, butterflies, chants and a pagan deity called Manon – but has gut-renovated the property and restored the female empowermen­t theme the first one virtually cried out for.

It is a film about resistance and sisterhood. One recurring slogan is “Your difference is your power.” Another is: “You shouldn’t run from your power.” It arrives at a time when the concept of witches is being reclaimed, just as this story has been.

The first film starred Neve Campbell, Robin Tunney, Fairuza Balk and Rachel True. The new one stars Cailee Spaeny, Gideon Adlon, Lovie Simone, and Zoey Luna, widening the circle to include a trans voice.

Appropriat­ely, the soundtrack kicks off with an Alanis Morissette tune, leading a female-centric sonic landscape that includes Lonette, Princess Nokia, Sharon Van Etten, Nadia Rose and Betta Lemme.

Spaeny plays a new girl in a new town, echoing the role Tunney played in “The Craft.” The new girl connects with a coven of three fledgling witches who are looking for a fourth to com

plete their circle. “So it shall be sealed and done/when all four corners meet as one.”

The foursome contend with bullies but grow in confidence as they begin to assert their powers. With a flick of a hand, they can add face gems or set fires or injure a tormenter. When they levitate a member, they repeat the incantatio­n from the first film: “Light as a feather, stiff as a board.”

Lister-jones’ script is very naturalist­ic and current – “all the feels,” “VBD” and “That’s fire.” There are “Twilight” references and a cauldron made out of a bong. In one spell, the witches make a sexist bully suddenly very politicall­y correct and vulnerable, apologizin­g for his power to shame. “I’m sorry,” he says.

Michelle Monaghan plays single mom to Spaeny’s character and David Duchovny, as a potential stepdad, masterfull­y fills his scenes with a troubling macho spirit. (He plays a motivation­al speaker who believes power equals order and is author of “The Hallowed Masculine.”)

The four witches do squabble over how far to push their magic – “If we’re not going to use our power responsibl­y, then we shouldn’t be using it at all,” one says – but unity is the solution.

As it races to its cool supernatur­al climax – and then a coda that connects it to the first film – “The Craft: Legacy” is firing on all cylinders, looking back respectful­ly but also showing how the same story in different hands can soar.

We beg Lister-jones to do it again and reclaim and retell more schlocky fare from the ’80s or ’90s. What about an updated “Weird Science” or “Risky Business?” One thing is clear: She’s fire.

 ?? COLUMBIA PICTURES/SONY ?? Zoey Luna, from left, Gideon Adlon, Lovie Simone and Cailee Spaeny in a scene from “The Craft: Legacy.”
COLUMBIA PICTURES/SONY Zoey Luna, from left, Gideon Adlon, Lovie Simone and Cailee Spaeny in a scene from “The Craft: Legacy.”

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