Season of the Witch official wallpaper
Season of the Witch poster

Season of the Witch

  • 5.4 /10

  • 2545

  • 11%

Plot

A 14th century Crusader returns with his comrade to a homeland devastated by the Black Plague. The Church commands the two knights to transport a witch to a remote abbey, where monks will perform a ritual in hopes of ending the pestilence.

Cast

Nicolas Cage as Behman
Nicolas Cage

as Behman

Ron Perlman as Felson
Ron Perlman

as Felson

Ulrich Thomsen as Eckhardt
Ulrich Thomsen

as Eckhardt

Christopher Lee as Cardinal D'Ambroise
Christopher Lee

as Cardinal D'Ambroise

Fernanda Dorogi as Givaudon
Fernanda Dorogi

as Givaudon

Stephen Graham as Hagamar
Stephen Graham

as Hagamar

Rebekah Kennedy as Peasant Trurk Girl
Rebekah Kennedy

as Peasant Trurk Girl

Matt Devere as Sergeant in Arms
Matt Devere

as Sergeant in Arms

Claire Foy as The Girl
Claire Foy

as The Girl

Movie Facts

Rated

  • PG-13

Status

  • Released

Release Date

  • January 7, 2011

Production Companies

  • Atlas Entertainment

  • Relativity Media

  • Mandate International

  • Rogue Pictures

Production Countries

  • United States of America

Spoken Language

  • Latin

  • English

Budget

  • $40,000,000.00

Revenue

  • $91,627,228.00

Runtime

  • 1.58 hrs

Links

Gallery

Reviews

It never received very god critics and I have to say it wasn’t the best film that I have seen, even though Nicolas Cage is one of my favorite actors. Then again, I never really like it when my favorite actors die at the end of the movie. Also the CGI, especially at the end of the film, was of rather mediocre quality. Anyway, on the whole it was a fairly nice medieval sword swinging fantasy/sup…

***Knights, crusades, black plague, witches, castles, foreboding forests and demons*** RELEASED IN EARLY 2011 and directed by Dominic Sena, "Season of the Witch" chronicles events when two ex-Teutonic Knight crusaders (Nicolas Cage & Ron Pearlman) traveling through Styria in modern-day Austria are enlisted to escort an alleged witch suspected of causing the black death (Claire Foy) to a remote…

**A perfect example of how disrespect for the past and history can totally annihilate a film, even if it is fiction.** I really enjoy watching period films. However, my work as a historian gives me some antibodies to these films, for reasons linked to the lack of ability to harmonize creative freedom and strict respect for the historical facts and period customs. So, it was with some curiosity…