L-R: Neve Campbell, Fairuza Balk, Rachel True, Robin Tunney Photo: Columbia Pictures In TV, movies, and real life, women have been at the forefront of the year’s biggest stories — so this Halloween season, we’re looking at pop culture’s most wicked depiction of female power.
The Craft, directed by Andrew Fleming and co-written by Peter Filardi, centers on Sarah Bailey , who moves to Los Angeles for a fresh start with her father and stepmother after she attempts suicide. She struggles to find a place for herself in her new Catholic high school and finds a surprising communion with three outsiders who believe she’s the natural witch meant to complete their coven — Bonnie , Rochelle , and Nancy .
Witchcraft is more than mere teenage rebellion for these young girls. It’s a means to attain what at first glance appears unattainable: power, control, autonomy, the ability to live beyond the various oppressive forces that govern their lives. For many girls, witches are our first brush with any depiction of feminism and the price women pay in searching for control over our lives.
angelicabastien I felt all of this as a mildly goth queer kid in the Deep South, too. It really is special, and you articulated exactly why, even coming from a different but similar perspective. Bless the teen girl in all of us!
angelicabastien
angelicabastien Good casting and acting helped, too.
angelicabastien
angelicabastien
angelicabastien
angelicabastien
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