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The Wicker Man (1973, UK)
In director Robin Hardy's suspenseful, mysterious
and erotic folk horror-occult film - an R-rated classic British
supernatural thriller, with a tagline that described the double lure
of sex and death: ("Flesh to touch...Flesh to burn! Don't keep
the Wicker Man waiting!"); the screenplay by Anthony Shaffer's
script was derived from the 1967 novel Ritual by David Pinner;
the film was notable for containing 13 traditional folk songs that
complemented the film's authenticity.
[Note: an inferior US remake
directed by Neil LaBute starred Nicolas Cage and Ellen Burstyn - The
Wicker Man (2006).]
- in the plot set in late April of 1973, repressed,
virginal, puritanical and devoutly religious Scottish policeman
Sergeant Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) traveled
solo by seaplane to Summerisle (during the opening title credits);
it was a remote Scottish (Hebridian) island known for its fruit production
- he had received
an anonymous tip in a letter, regarding a
missing young 12 year-old schoolgirl Rowan Morrison (Geraldine
Cowper), the alleged daughter of May Morrison (Irene Sunter), a resident
of the island; it was suspected that the missing-girl (or
kidnapped?) victim might be located there, or there might be clues
to her disappearance
- while Sgt. Howie was at May Morrison's confectionary
shop in town, the alleged mother said the Rowan in the photo didn't
exist; she introduced Howie to her 9 year-old daughter named Myrtle
- not the girl in Howie's photograph; to Howie's surprise, Myrtle
identified Rowan as a hare she knew who ran and played in a field
- after his arrival, the Sgt. booked a room for the
night in the local Green Man Inn with the pub innkeeper Alder MacGregor
(Lindsay Kemp); [Note: The "Green Man" was often associated
with vegetative growth or rebirth.] He met the sexy and bawdy
inkeeper's daughter Willow MacGregor (Britt Ekland) who would show
him to the dining room and later to his room
(l to r): At the Inn: Willow and Alder MacGregor
(Britt Ekland and Lindsay Kemp)
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Sgt. Howie in His Constable's Uniform
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Pictures of the Harvest Festivals - The Latest
One was Missing!
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- while viewing
photographs on the Inn's wall of the island's annual Harvest Festivals
(May Day), Sgt. Howie noted that the pictures strangely ended in
May of 1971 (the one for the spring of 1972 was missing); later,
he speculated that the missing girl would be the latest
virgin sacrifice as the May Queen for the current year of 1973
- while there, Howie was continually tested by the
disturbing pagan practices and degenerate sexual behavior of the
island's inhabitants, some of whom practiced
open sexuality; outside the Inn after dinner, he witnessed
various unsettling and indecent sights, such as couples
copulating in a graveyard, and a naked female crying over a tombstone;
the celebate Christian Howie had a restless night when forced to
listen through the wall to orgasmic moanings of Willow having sex
in the adjacent room
Odd and Unusual Practices of Pagans on Summerisle
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Couples Copulating in a Graveyard
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Naked Woman Weeping Next to a Tombstone
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Maypole - a Phallic Symbol
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- the next morning while walking to visit the local
school, Howie watched young male students engaged in an outdoor's
May Pole celebration; indoors, girls
in a school class were openly and frankly corrupted as they were
taught by Miss Rose (Diane Cilento) about how the May Pole was
a phallic symbol -- "It
is the image of the penis, which is venerated in religions such
as ours, as symbolizing the generative force in nature"; Sgt.
Howie interrupted and asked if any of the students recognized Rowan
in his picture - none of them did; but then he discovered Rowan's
name in the school register (and one suspiciously-empty desk in
the room); he denounced the teacher and the class of girls as "despicable
little liars"
- Howie was very disturbed that the young people were
being taught reincarnation rather than the Christian doctrine of
resurrection; Miss Rose explained: "Those rotting bodies are a
great stumbling block for the childish imagination"; later
in town at May Morrison's store, her daughter Myrtle was told to
cure her sore throat with a small toad briefly placed into her
mouth
Grotesque Headstones
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Mother Nursing Child with Egg in Her Hand
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Small Toads as a Cure for Sore Throats
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- in the nearby crumbled church's graveyard, he observed
grotesque headstones, and a young mother nursing her infant and
holding an egg in her open hand; the island
was devoid of Christian churches (or ministers and priests) and
the remains of graveyards had been desecrated
- Howie's fears were confirmed when Rowan Morrison's
unmarked grave was pointed out (she had supposedly been dead for
six to seven months) - with her naval string as decoration; in
the official registrar's office in town, Howie was denied seeing
Rowan's death certificate; he was told he first needed permission
from Lord Summerisle (Christopher Lee); he pressured her
to show him the book, revealing no record of Rowan's death
- in the town's apothecary shop, with clear jars of
foreskins, rat brains, snake oil embrocation, brains, hearts, and
animal fetuses, the proprietor Mr. Lennox (Donald Eccles) was questioned
about his photographs of the May Day harvest celebrations
- Howie observed many of the town's pregnant women
engaged in fertility rites or initiations, who were seated naked in
a circle around a ceremonial fire in a Stonehenge setting, and jumping
through the flaming bonfire
- while visiting Lord Summerisle in his lavish estate,
Howie needed permission to exhume Rowan's body; he
became upset that many of the island's young inhabitants followed
the openly-pagan teachings of leader Lord Summerisle - an eccentric
millionaire and a proponent of atheism, fertility rites and witchcraft;
the Lord summarized the island's history of how its fruit crop
harvest, developed by his grandfather, was guaranteed for the barren
island by the propagation of pagan worship and sacrifice
- after exhuming Rowan's body, the carcass of
a dead hare was found in the coffin, and Howie was frustratingly
perplexed; it was further proof that Rowan was either
murdered, or possibly being detained for a future pagan human sacrifice
during the next day's May Day celebration to appease the gods of
the heathen community after a poor fruit harvest
- in the film's most-discussed sequence, during his second night at
the inn, the seductive Willow attempted to entice Howie in the room
next to his; at first as she laid in bed and pounded the wall behind
her with her right hand, she sang about "the
things I'll give to you...the things I'll show to you." Rising
from the bed, she strolled to the door and pounded against it,
as she writhed naked; she also stroked a statue before going to
her window and also striking its frame. She was soon striking other
objects in the room such as furniture and the wall to further drive
him insane; he proved that he wouldn't succumb to
the fleshly temptations provided by Willow
The Sensual Innkeeper's (Britt Ekland) Daughter's Dance
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Body Double in the Fully Nude Images
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- the next morning, Howie was unable to leave the
island after discovering that his seaplane had been sabotaged and
the radio was damaged
- just before the film's May Day finale, Lord Summerisle announced that a sacrifice
was about to take place at 3 pm: ("A holy sacrifice will be offered
up jointly to Nuada, our most sacred god of the Sun, and to Avellenau,
the beloved goddess of our orchards, in order that we may furnish
them with renewed power, to quicken the growth of our crops"); to
join in the town's May Day celebratory parade, Howie disguised
himself as Punch (he tied up the innkeeper Alder MacGregor (Lindsay
Kemp) and stole his costume and mask)
- at the end of the costumed parade at the beachside,
Howie viewed young Rowan tied up at the entrance to a cave;
he raced to her side to cut her free, but then after escaping
with her into the cave's dark tunnel, he emerged and discovered,
to his shock, that Rowan ran to embrace Lord Summerisle, her
islander captor and her mother; the 'missing' girl was never really
missing - but had served as bait to lure him there; Lord Summerisle
admitted: "The game is over"
- Rowan had been part of Lord
Summerisle's grand plan to entrap him as the year's
virginal fire sacrifice, after the year's disastrous fruit harvest;
Howie was apprehended and told that he would be the perfect candidate:
("Animals are fine, but their acceptability is limited. A young child is
even better, but not nearly as effective as the right kind
of adult")
- he was told he was the "unique" sacrificial
subject that they needed, for four reasons:
- Willow: "A man who would come here of his own
free will."
- Librarian: "A man who has come here with the
power of a king by representing the Law."
- Willow: "A man who would come here as a virgin."
- Librarian: "A man who has come here as a fool."
[Note: He was costumed as Punch, one of the great fool-victims
of history.]
- Howie learned that he was the one to be sacrificed to save the
crops: (Librarian: "You will undergo death and rebirth. Resurrection,
if you like. The rebirth, sadly, will not be yours, but that of our
crops"); he retorted back: "I am a Christian. And as a Christian,
I hope for resurrection. And even if you kill me now, it is I who
will live again, not your damned apples"
- Howie was told he was to be prepared
for his sacrificial fate at sunset by being stripped and clothed
in a ceremonial garment with his hands bound: ("It is time
to keep your appointment with The Wicker Man"); he
protested his fate: "Don't you see that killing me is not
going to bring back your apples?" (arguing that the
crop failure was due to the climate and not the
lack of a sacrifice), but the heathen leaders refused to listen
to him, believing that their apple crop would be restored because
of his sacrifice
- he was led to a
giant, hollow wicker-constructed figure of a man on a cliffside at
sunset where he cried out ("Oh, my God!"). The 'wicker
man' statue was created of wicker materials designed to be used for
fire sacrifices - with compartments for live farm animals (pigs,
ducks, calves, etc.). Lord Summerisle
prayed to the "Mighty god of the Sun, bountiful goddess of our
orchards. Accept our sacrifice and make our blossoms fruit."
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The Ritualistic Sacrifice of Sgt. Neil Howie in The Wicker Man
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- he was horrified when he was locked inside the
structure and the worshippers surrounded it (and sang a Middle English
folk song with lyrics as it was set on fire : "Summer is a-comin' in, loudly sing cuckoo.
Grows the seed and blows the mead, and springs the wood anew. Sing,
cuckoo! Ewe bleats harshly after lamb, cows after calves make moo")
- while he was being burned alive,
Sgt. Howie began to recite Psalm 23 as a prayer to God in
heaven for deliverance: ("The lord's my shepherd, I'll not want,
He takes me down to lie in pastures...")
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Sgt. Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) Piloting a Seaplane
to Summerisle
Photograph of Allegedly Missing 12 Year Old Rowan Morrison (Geraldine
Cowper)
The Green Man Inn
The Alluring Innkeeper's Daughter Willow MacGregor
Schoolteacher Miss Rose (Diane Cilento)
Sexual Rites
Fertility Rites: Young Girls Dancing and Jumping Over Fire in
a Stonehedge Setting
Lord Summerisle (Christopher Lee)
The Contents of Rowan's Exhumed Coffin: A Dead Hare
Rowan's Chance Encounter with Naked Librarian (Ingrid Pitt) in a Bathtub
Howie in Stolen Punch Costume During May Day Parade
Rowan - Tied Up in Front of Cave
Rowan Cut Free by Howie (in Punch Costume)
Rowan Embraced by Lord Summerisle
Lord Summerisle to Howie: He was the Perfect Sacrificial Candidate
Howie Protesting His Fate: "I am a Christian!"
Howie's First View of 'The Wicker Man'
Howie Carried Into the Wicker Man Structure
Lord Summerisle Praying: "Mighty god of the Sun..."
Flames Consuming the Structure
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