| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Nicolas Cage | ... | ||
| Ellen Burstyn | ... | ||
| Kate Beahan | ... | ||
| Frances Conroy | ... | ||
| Molly Parker | ... |
Sister Rose /
Sister Thorn
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| Leelee Sobieski | ... | ||
| Diane Delano | ... | ||
| Michael Wiseman | ... |
Officer Pete
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| Erika-Shaye Gair | ... |
Rowan Woodward
(as Erika Shaye Gair)
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| Christa Campbell | ... |
Truck Stop Waitress
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| Emily Holmes | ... |
Station Wagon Mom
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Zemphira Gosling | ... |
Station Wagon Girl
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Matthew Walker | ... |
Sea Plane Pilot
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| Mary Black | ... | ||
| Christine Willes | ... |
Sister Violet
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While recovering from a tragic accident on the road, the patrolman Edward Malus receives a letter from his former fiancée Willow, who left him years ago without any explanation, telling that her daughter Rowan is missing. Edward travels to the private island of Summerisle, where Willow lives in an odd community that plant fruits, and she reveals that Rowan is actually their daughter. Along his investigation with the hostile and unhelpful dwellers, Edward discloses that the locals are pagans, practicing old rituals to improve their harvest, and Rowan is probably alive and being prepared to be sacrificed. When he locates the girl, he finds also the dark truth about the wicker man. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Anyone not aware of the 1973 original British Lion movie ' The Wicker Man' would,no doubt, have left the cinema with the impression 'Poor' and 'Peurile'.
As a devotee of the original I left with the impression Purely Poor.
From the grim reality of haggle toothed inbreds drawing the force of law and order into a web of paganistic barbaric ritual on a remote Scottish island, named Summerisle(the original) to a near Amazon-ic colony off the Maine coast of the US, named Summersisle, the remake hardly hits the spot.
This is, quite sadly, a case of what 'could' have been a classic remake of a classic being tampered with to cater for a simple minded public. NOTHING MORE AND NOTHING LESS.
Gentlemen (or given the reworked context of the film) Ladies involved ... hang your heads in shame.