Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters  

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Starring: Jeremy Renner, Gemma Arterton, Famke Janssen, Peter Stormare, Thomas Mann, Derek Mears, Robin Atkin Downes, Pihla Viitala, Ingrid Bolsø Berdal, Joanna Kulig, Bjørn Sundquist, Rainer Bock, Thomas Scharff, Kathrin Kühnel, Cedric Eich, Alea-Sophia Boudodimos
Directed by: Tommy Wirkola
Produced by: Will Ferrell, Adam McKay, Kevin Messick, Beau Flynn, Denis L. Stewart, Chris Henchy, Tripp Vinson
Written by:
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Horror
MPAA rating: R
Runtime: 88 minutes
Release date:   Jan 25, 2013
Official website [external site]
Fifteen years after Hansel (Jeremy Renner) and Gretel (Gemma Arterton) defeated the wicked witch who planned to have them for her dinner, the siblings have come of age as skilled bounty hunters. Hell-bent on retribution, they have dedicated their lives to hunting down and destroying every witch still lurking in the dark forests of their homeland. As the notorious blood moon approaches, the siblings face a great evil -- one that could hold the secret to their terrifying past.
Chicago Tribune   Roger Moore
FILM REVIEW: HANSEL & GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS





By Roger Moore





Tribune Newspapers Critic





1 1/2 stars





An R-rated horror action comedy fairy tale -- how's that for genre bending?





"Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters" is more Gatling guns and grenades than the Brothers Grimm. It takes the kidnapped kiddies into adulthood, where they've parlayed their fame at cooking a witch's goose into a business. Got a witch problem? Call H & G, the extermination experts.





High concept pitch or no, the movie doesn't really work. They were shooting for sort of a witch-hunting "Zombieland," an F-bomb-riddled "Van Helsing" packed with comical anachronisms -- a Bavarian forest past with witch trials, pump shotguns and primitive stun guns, where bottles of milk have woodcut pictures of missing children on the labels.





Hansel (Jeremy Renner) and Gretel (Gemma Arterton) show up just as the village of Augsburg is about to burn a redhead. "Gingers" were a favorite target of witch hunters. Hansel shrugs this barbaric crime off, but Gretel insists that the locals need "evidence." That puts them in conflict with the sheriff (Peter Stormare), who can't get a handle on their "witch plague" and the missing children who come with it. H & G have been hired to do what he cannot.





It isn't long after Hansel mutters "anyplace we can get a drink in this hell hole?" that the siblings are on the job, chasing lesser witches in pursuit of the Great Witch, played by Famke Janssen as if the makeup is going to do all the acting for her.





And there may be a troll involved.





"Trolls are extra," Hansel growls, always watching their bottom line.





Hansel and Gretel have a groupie (Thomas Mann), and the woman (Pihla Viitala) they saved from burning in the opening scene wants to repay the favor to Hansel, a repayment that involves skinny-dipping. And when they're on the clock, they have all manner of clever gear to help them battle the wand-wielders -- pistols, rifles, a semi-automatic crossbow, the aforementioned stun gun (hand-cranked).





Writer-director Tommy Wirkola focuses on the fights, and flings all manner of viscera at the 3-D camera as limbs are whacked off and heads and torsos explode. Less attention was paid to the story, and the dialogue is a tad over-reliant on the random F-word to land a laugh.





The cleverest touch? Hansel's mania for candy-covered houses is what landed Hansel & Gretel in that witch's clutches, all those years ago. Now, he carries an ancient hypodermic needle and takes injections to ward off insulin shock.





The moral of the fairy tale? Lay off the candy or a witch'll get you.





MPAA rating: R (for strong fantasy horror violence and gore, brief sexuality/nudity and language).





Running time: 1:26.





Cast: Jeremy Renner (Hansel); Gemma Arterton (Gretel); Peter Stormare (Sheriff Berringer); Famke Janssen (Muriel).





Credits: Directed by Tommy Wirkola; written by Wirkola and D.W. Harper; produced by Adam McKay, Beau Flynn, Chris Henchy, Kevin J. Messick and Will Ferrell. A Paramount Pictures release.