The Guardian (USA)

Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey review – cack-handed out-of-copyright horror

- Peter Bradshaw All together now:

Winnie-the-Pooh,Somehow you just knew,A scary movie version was the wrong approach, andWinnie-thePooh,The idea’s at least new,Willy, nilly, still he’s now a misogynist killer.

On the chill stroke of midnight, 31 December 2021, AA Milne’s Winnie-thePooh went out of copyright and, like a demon from an open grave, a worryingly bad idea flew out into the world: a horror version of AA Milne’s Winnie the Pooh. Well, here it is, promising to do for Brit horror what Sex Lives of the Potato Men did for Brit comedy, with a terrifying combinatio­n of not-scary and not-funny, and a cast of Love Island types on Xanax apparently reading the dialogue off an optician’s chart held up behind the camera.

What we really need to see is not the film, but the pitch meeting – or in fact the meeting before the meeting. Hidden cameras should have been set up at a central London members’ club where no one is fussed about people going into the toilets two at a time. A lightbulb goes on over someone’s gurning face and they gibberingl­y announce the idea for an irresistib­le subject/treatment disconnect: Winnie the Pooh (cutesy kids’ entertainm­ent) plus horror (supercool violent and hilarious). But the OMFG factor is sky high for the wrong reasons.

As it happens, the resulting film doesn’t show the smallest observant interest in the actual Winnie-the-Pooh material. There’s nothing here to show that, like many children’s stories, it has something potentiall­y disturbing about it. Or that maybe AA Milne’s PTSD after the first world war – a complicate­d determinan­t factor in his famous creation – does indeed speak to the horror experience. But look, if the people involved in this film aren’t that interested in Winnie-the-Pooh, I don’t blame them. I’ve always found the allegedly adorable bear incredibly stupid and boring. But why do it?

An elaborate backstory claims that the creatures of Hundred Acre Wood came to depend on little Christophe­r Robin’s visits, both for the food and the love he brought them. But then he grew up and went away, and this betrayal turned them all into embittered, feral and cannibalis­tic monsters, who actually ate Eeyore, which I guess gave him something to be miserable about. (It is an amusing idea but one which, like everything else, dies in the cackhanded execution.) Some time later, a young woman called Maria (Maria Taylor) who is getting over a horrible

 ?? ?? A whole load of Pooh … Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. Photograph: Fetch Publicity
A whole load of Pooh … Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. Photograph: Fetch Publicity

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