Los Angeles Times

Sequel lacks ‘ Craft’s’ magic

- BY KATIE WALSH Katie Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

The legacy of Andrew Fleming’s 1996 film “The Craft” still looms large, its goth- lite aesthetic of baby tees and black lipstick the epitome of cool for a certain generation of impression­able teens. The line “We are the weirdos, mister,” became a manifesto of sorts for girls who envisioned themselves as quirky, edgy outsiders. So it’s no wonder that the movie gods ( horror imprint Blumhouse) conjured up a sequel/ reboot, placing “The Craft: Legacy” in the very capable hands of writer- director Zoe Lister- Jones.

Although some fans may have wanted to see the original fearsome foursome of Fairuza Balk, Robin Tunney, Neve Campbell and Rachel True back in action 20- plus years later, Blumhouse and Lister- Jones know who this movie should be for: teenage girls, not necessaril­y nostalgic 30- somethings.

Lister- Jones follows the basic plot blueprint but updates the story with an eye to contempora­ry culture. We still follow a new- in- town teen, Lily ( Cailee Spaeny), finding herself as the magical fourth member of a high school coven and discoverin­g her latent witchy powers.

Lily and her mother, Helen ( Michelle Monaghan), have just moved in with Helen’s new partner, Adam ( David Duchovny), and his three taciturn sons. On Lily’s first day at school, she becomes the butt of a joke straight out of a teen magazine’s embarrassi­ng moments column, and when the trio of Frankie ( Gideon Adlon), Tabby ( Lovie Simone) and Lourdes ( Zoey Luna) console her, she’s grateful.

The four soon discover what their powers combined can do against the aggressive boys, and their coven is off and running, with days spent chanting and studying the magical arts. The vibe is much more “sparkly rave fairy” than “angry Catholic schoolgirl,” but the essence is the same: fun and friendship mixed with light occultism.

For a villain, Lister- Jones harnesses the cultural forces that stand in opposition to Lily and her fierce feminine faction: a retro- style toxic masculinit­y, embodied by Lily’s would- be stepdad. There are many ominous things about Adam, a speaker, author and thought leader of sorts in the masculinit­y sphere. He’s controllin­g, leads mysterious, cultish men’s groups, has a bunch of old family crests with snakes on them, and seriously, what is up with his sons? Lister- Jones stirs and stirs this bubbling cauldron of domestic menace and suspense, creating an intense energy that promises to explode with something truly terrifying, but it merely fizzles when all is revealed.

The elements are there to make “The Craft: Legacy” something special for its audience of younger women. There’s the compelling cast There’s the smart update on the material that wants to dig into heteropatr­iarchy as so threatened by a little light witchcraft. There’s also a requisite connection to the original. Everything hums along until it abruptly crashes and burns, and one can’t help but wonder if the film was picked apart to fit a PG- 13 rating and a sub- 100- minute runtime.

One of the early tricks the girls master is an ability to freeze time, and after that ending, you wish we could freeze it right when they learn to embrace their magical abilities, dizzy with their own power. Unfortunat­ely, movie magic doesn’t go that far.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States