EL MONTE DE LAS BRUJAS
(THE WITCHES MOUNTAIN)
Dir. Raúl Artigot, 1972
Spain. 86 min
In Spanish with English subtitles
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 - 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 - 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 - 5 PM
After an opening that a written description would only spoil, Carla shows up unannounced at the home of her (ex?)boyfriend, Mario, who wants little to do with her. To avoid Carla, Mario forgoes his vacation time and heads north to the mountains on assignment as a photojournalist. Arriving at a beach, Mario, and his godlike handlebar mustache, luridly comes across a young sunbather named Delia. Smitten, Delia decides to join Mario on his assignment and the two head deep into the mountains. What follows is a sequence of bizarre and unsettling events: strange cloaked men lingering outside the windows of a mountain inn, the theft of Mario’s car by an unknown entity, unexplainable photographic anomalies, and a nighttime funeral procession. What or who is behind these strange occurrences? What fate is in store for Mario? And what does it have to do with Carla?
What the film may lack in plot and coherence, it more than makes up for in its ethereal mood and striking atmosphere. The true star being the mountains of northern Spain, who’s ancient harsh landscape coated in lush vegetation already feels haunted in its appearance alone. Raúl Artigot’s career was more often spent in the role of cinematographer, having worked on such features as CANNIBAL MAN, THE GHOST GALLIEN, THE EROTIC RITES OF FRANKENSTEIN and many more. WITCHES MOUNTAIN would be his directorial debut, and only one of his 3 total features. Knowing this, the film’s tendency for style-over-story makes perfect sense (as well as Mario’s profession). If you enjoyed Spectacle’s summer screenings of LE ORME, and the vibes it exuded, WITCHES MOUNTAIN may be right for you.
Similar to LA PAPESSE, WITCHES MOUNTAIN was banned in its home country (fuck you Franco), and gained an undeserved reputation for being violent and misogynistic due to its censorship. However, it should be noted that the film only appeared in front of investigators/censors because some of the actors in the film felt they were being shortchanged on night shoots and in wanting fair compensation snitched to the review board. In light of the recent and ongoing SAG and writer’s union strikes, we must point out that this could be your film’s fate if you skimp on paying your workers. Languishing in obscurity for decades, and then having a short run at an ex-bodega in Brooklyn for $5 tickets. Chilling.