Weird Studies

Episode 85: On 'The Wicker Man'

10.28.2020 - By Phil Ford and J. F. MartelPlay

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Since its release in 1973, Robin Hardy's The Wicker Man has exerted a profound influence on the development of horror cinema, a rich vein of folk music, and the modern pagan revival more generally. Anthony Shaffer's ingenious screenplay gives us a thrilling yarn that is also a meditation on the nature of religious belief and practice. Just in time for Halloween, Phil and JF discuss the philosophical ideas that undergird this folk horror classic, focusing on the perennial role of sacrifice in religious thought.

REFERENCES

Robin Hardy (director), The Wicker Man

Stanley Kubrick (director), The Shining

Terence Fisher (director), The Devil Rides Out

Piers Haggard (director), Blood on Satan’s Claw

John Boorman (director), Deliverance

Rob Young, Electric Eden

Gerald Gardner, English wiccan

Margaret Murray, English anthropologist

Cecil Sharp, English ethnomusicologist

Phil Ford, "Taboo: Time and Belief in Exotica"

Friedrich Nietzsche, Untimely Meditations

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