Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuPursued by her stepmother for eternal beauty, Snow White flees into a terrifying forest and aligns with seven bloodthirsty dwarves - cold-blooded assassins with a knack for brutal killings. ... Alles lesenPursued by her stepmother for eternal beauty, Snow White flees into a terrifying forest and aligns with seven bloodthirsty dwarves - cold-blooded assassins with a knack for brutal killings. Her spirit is tested in this grim fairy tale.Pursued by her stepmother for eternal beauty, Snow White flees into a terrifying forest and aligns with seven bloodthirsty dwarves - cold-blooded assassins with a knack for brutal killings. Her spirit is tested in this grim fairy tale.
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So I'd like to start by saying that I could not finish this movie. This happen almost never and I cannot remember the last time that I did.
The photography is not so bad, special effects (both CGI and practical) are also quite good.
But the acting.... It is so bad, it's not even funny. And the realisation look as it was made by a student. As explaining what not to do in acting and realisation, perfect movie. But as a Movie in itself, hard pass.
The photography is not so bad, special effects (both CGI and practical) are also quite good.
But the acting.... It is so bad, it's not even funny. And the realisation look as it was made by a student. As explaining what not to do in acting and realisation, perfect movie. But as a Movie in itself, hard pass.
Living in a desolate community, a woman learns that she has royal blood when the Queen turns her attention to her to continue looking youthful so she can enact a diabolical plan to rule the kingdom, forcing her into the forest and banding together with a group of dwarves to fight back against her.
Overall, this was a rather enjoyable take on the fairy tale. Among the better aspects of this one tends to incorporate its own unique spin on the typical mythology of the story by changing around a lot of the usual elements of the story. Rather than deal with the usual setup of the story offering the kind of traditional low-rent peasant community that Snow White is involved in while the Queen looks on jealous of everything she has despite her poor state of life is a solid way of going about trying to get back to the throne's power by trying to accumulate her beauty into her own for own gain. It manages to bring about the kind of connection to the original feature, especially once the decision to flee the kingdom and live with the dwarves is put into place, which provides this with some intriguing connections to the fabled story. When matched against the new elements of the story involving the more gruesome attempts at showcasing the brutality inherent in the story and how it would all play out, there's a lot to like here. The general state of the Queen adopting a more vampiric attitude to her beauty by torturing and removing parts of their body so that their body parts can be served to keep her beauty more youthful until her plan comes into focus serves everything rather nicely, especially when it starts moving away from the peasants she's rounded up and onto her inner circle which gives this some solid attempts at body horror. That carries over into the finale, where the different forces come together to deliver on the quest to stop the Queen's plans, leading to some solid action along the way, and with some fine nudity, manage to give this a lot to like. There are some issues here that hold this one down. The main issue here is that it tends to follow more of a dark fantasy route than an overly generic feel, making it appropriate for more adventurous fans, while others may be somewhat more turned off by the atmosphere created here. The idea and concept of the film is built more on the idea of going through their quest littered with perils, magic creatures, and disloyal allegiances that all point to a different genre atmosphere that only becomes far more obvious when it plays out. There's nothing genuinely wrong with it, but it becomes a big part of the film to have to get over as the fairy tale roots it tries to honor are kept in check enough for it to be a factor here as a means of personal preference, despite being the only real issue.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Full Nudity, and Graphic Language.
Overall, this was a rather enjoyable take on the fairy tale. Among the better aspects of this one tends to incorporate its own unique spin on the typical mythology of the story by changing around a lot of the usual elements of the story. Rather than deal with the usual setup of the story offering the kind of traditional low-rent peasant community that Snow White is involved in while the Queen looks on jealous of everything she has despite her poor state of life is a solid way of going about trying to get back to the throne's power by trying to accumulate her beauty into her own for own gain. It manages to bring about the kind of connection to the original feature, especially once the decision to flee the kingdom and live with the dwarves is put into place, which provides this with some intriguing connections to the fabled story. When matched against the new elements of the story involving the more gruesome attempts at showcasing the brutality inherent in the story and how it would all play out, there's a lot to like here. The general state of the Queen adopting a more vampiric attitude to her beauty by torturing and removing parts of their body so that their body parts can be served to keep her beauty more youthful until her plan comes into focus serves everything rather nicely, especially when it starts moving away from the peasants she's rounded up and onto her inner circle which gives this some solid attempts at body horror. That carries over into the finale, where the different forces come together to deliver on the quest to stop the Queen's plans, leading to some solid action along the way, and with some fine nudity, manage to give this a lot to like. There are some issues here that hold this one down. The main issue here is that it tends to follow more of a dark fantasy route than an overly generic feel, making it appropriate for more adventurous fans, while others may be somewhat more turned off by the atmosphere created here. The idea and concept of the film is built more on the idea of going through their quest littered with perils, magic creatures, and disloyal allegiances that all point to a different genre atmosphere that only becomes far more obvious when it plays out. There's nothing genuinely wrong with it, but it becomes a big part of the film to have to get over as the fairy tale roots it tries to honor are kept in check enough for it to be a factor here as a means of personal preference, despite being the only real issue.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Full Nudity, and Graphic Language.
In a year flooded with high-budget remakes and safe studio offerings, The Death of Snow White emerges like a blood-soaked dagger in a field of plastic swords. Written, directed, and produced by Jason Brooks, known to horror fans as the terrifyingly physical Jason Voorhees in Friday the 13th: Bloodlines. This $1.2 million indie horror reimagining of the classic fairy tale isn't just bold... it's brutal. And more importantly, it's good.
Unlike Disney's own lifeless live-action attempt, Brooks doesn't hold back. The Death of Snow White takes the bones of the original tale and reanimates them with twisted intent. We follow Snow White (played with grit and vulnerability by Sanae Loutsis) not through a magical woodland filled with animals and dwarfs whistling while they work-but into a nightmare realm of gnarled trees, blood magic, and a pack of deranged, vengeful dwarves who make the seven from your childhood look like Teletubbies in comparison.
And while I'm not typically a fan of fantasy (ask me about The Lord of the Rings and I'll tell you once was enough), this film doesn't feel like a fantasy in the traditional sense. It's horror first, dark fantasy second... an eerie, dirt under the nails kind of experience where the forest feels alive and the danger is always one breath away.
The standout here, though, is Chelsea Edmundson as the Evil Queen. Obsession with beauty has always been the core of the character, but this version takes it to a chilling extreme. Edmundson sinks her teeth into the role, creating a villain who is captivating, terrifying, and disturbingly real. Her scenes pulse with menace, and her descent into madness and vanity fueled cruelty is the film's black heart. This might just be the best version of the Evil Queen we've ever seen on screen.
What's most impressive, though, is how much Brooks pulls off with so little. For a mere $1.2 million budget, this film delivers on atmosphere, gore, and world-building in a way that makes Disney's $240 million effort look like a bloated costume party. It's proof that vision and tone matter more than pixels and polish.
The Death of Snow White is a dark fairy tale done right, bold, bloody, and refreshingly unafraid to push boundaries. Even if you don't typically enjoy fantasy, the horror elements, strong performances, and razor-sharp direction make this one worth your time. Jason Brooks has crafted something twisted and special, and Chelsea Edmundson's Evil Queen is one for the horror hall of fame.
Unlike Disney's own lifeless live-action attempt, Brooks doesn't hold back. The Death of Snow White takes the bones of the original tale and reanimates them with twisted intent. We follow Snow White (played with grit and vulnerability by Sanae Loutsis) not through a magical woodland filled with animals and dwarfs whistling while they work-but into a nightmare realm of gnarled trees, blood magic, and a pack of deranged, vengeful dwarves who make the seven from your childhood look like Teletubbies in comparison.
And while I'm not typically a fan of fantasy (ask me about The Lord of the Rings and I'll tell you once was enough), this film doesn't feel like a fantasy in the traditional sense. It's horror first, dark fantasy second... an eerie, dirt under the nails kind of experience where the forest feels alive and the danger is always one breath away.
The standout here, though, is Chelsea Edmundson as the Evil Queen. Obsession with beauty has always been the core of the character, but this version takes it to a chilling extreme. Edmundson sinks her teeth into the role, creating a villain who is captivating, terrifying, and disturbingly real. Her scenes pulse with menace, and her descent into madness and vanity fueled cruelty is the film's black heart. This might just be the best version of the Evil Queen we've ever seen on screen.
What's most impressive, though, is how much Brooks pulls off with so little. For a mere $1.2 million budget, this film delivers on atmosphere, gore, and world-building in a way that makes Disney's $240 million effort look like a bloated costume party. It's proof that vision and tone matter more than pixels and polish.
The Death of Snow White is a dark fairy tale done right, bold, bloody, and refreshingly unafraid to push boundaries. Even if you don't typically enjoy fantasy, the horror elements, strong performances, and razor-sharp direction make this one worth your time. Jason Brooks has crafted something twisted and special, and Chelsea Edmundson's Evil Queen is one for the horror hall of fame.
A gory Disney reboot, here we go again. I stumbled upon this one by chance, drawn by the promise of a fairly professional production and an apparent 18+ rating that suggested something wild. Of course, the rating is wildly exaggerated, though the film does deliver a fair share of brutal, organ-heavy scenes.
The Death of Snow White sticks closely to the classic Disney tale, with all the key moments: the beauty-obsessed queen, the dark forest, the dwarves, the witch transformation, etc. It's well-paced, entertaining, and generous with its gruesome sequences. That said, there's a deeply cheesy vibe that sometimes kills the fun, though it's not unexpected. The fleeting attempts at humor consistently fall flat, feeling like the film is trying to appeal to kids between gory scenes, which is always awkward and out of place. Many secondary characters, like the Grimm brothers, are pointless, existing only to deliver heavy-handed, disposable jokes. Some fight scenes are choreographed with zero finesse, betraying an obvious lack of budget. You can feel a frustrating gap between the film's ambitions and its resources.
The big strength here is the gore. The creators serve up a relentless festival of effects, ranging from mildly unhinged to generally well-executed for a production like this. From the queen's macabre whims-using her maids as literal organ dispensers-to graphic fight sequences, there's plenty to sink your teeth into, including tooth-pulling, eyelid-stitching, decapitations, a woman torn apart by creatures, and heads smashed with hammers, with splatter effects that would make Ittenbach's Beyond the Limits proud. The medieval setting enhances it all. Some horror scenes are genuinely strong, from the forest monster attack to the mirror demons and the queen's grim fate in the epilogue. The film gets better as it goes, shedding much of its initial kitschy, almost parodic tone.
Disney horror adaptations are always flawed but never dull. The raw, crimson energy of this one is thrilling, despite some problematic nonsense. Looking forward to the next one, flaws and all.
The Death of Snow White sticks closely to the classic Disney tale, with all the key moments: the beauty-obsessed queen, the dark forest, the dwarves, the witch transformation, etc. It's well-paced, entertaining, and generous with its gruesome sequences. That said, there's a deeply cheesy vibe that sometimes kills the fun, though it's not unexpected. The fleeting attempts at humor consistently fall flat, feeling like the film is trying to appeal to kids between gory scenes, which is always awkward and out of place. Many secondary characters, like the Grimm brothers, are pointless, existing only to deliver heavy-handed, disposable jokes. Some fight scenes are choreographed with zero finesse, betraying an obvious lack of budget. You can feel a frustrating gap between the film's ambitions and its resources.
The big strength here is the gore. The creators serve up a relentless festival of effects, ranging from mildly unhinged to generally well-executed for a production like this. From the queen's macabre whims-using her maids as literal organ dispensers-to graphic fight sequences, there's plenty to sink your teeth into, including tooth-pulling, eyelid-stitching, decapitations, a woman torn apart by creatures, and heads smashed with hammers, with splatter effects that would make Ittenbach's Beyond the Limits proud. The medieval setting enhances it all. Some horror scenes are genuinely strong, from the forest monster attack to the mirror demons and the queen's grim fate in the epilogue. The film gets better as it goes, shedding much of its initial kitschy, almost parodic tone.
Disney horror adaptations are always flawed but never dull. The raw, crimson energy of this one is thrilling, despite some problematic nonsense. Looking forward to the next one, flaws and all.
Granted, I have to admit that when I stumbled upon the 2025 movie "The Death of Snow White", and opted to watch it on account of it being a movie that I had neither seen nor actually ever heard about, then I was harboring zero expectations given the movie's title.
However, writers Jason Brooks and Naomi Mechem-Miller actually put together a script and storyline that proved to be corny and campy enough to actually make for an oddly entertaining movie. Sure, this was by no means Shakespearian theater, but would you expect that from a movie carrying a title such as "The Death of Snow White"?
Of the entire cast ensemble in the movie, I was only familiar with leading actress Sanae Loutsis. The acting performances in the movie were actually good.
Visually then the movie was actually surprisingly good. The wardrobe, props and sets were good and actually had a medieval fantasy feel to them, which helped carry the movie nicely.
I was actually adequately entertained by the cheesiness of the movie.
My rating of director Jason Brooks's 2025 movie "The Death of Snow White" lands on a five out of ten stars.
However, writers Jason Brooks and Naomi Mechem-Miller actually put together a script and storyline that proved to be corny and campy enough to actually make for an oddly entertaining movie. Sure, this was by no means Shakespearian theater, but would you expect that from a movie carrying a title such as "The Death of Snow White"?
Of the entire cast ensemble in the movie, I was only familiar with leading actress Sanae Loutsis. The acting performances in the movie were actually good.
Visually then the movie was actually surprisingly good. The wardrobe, props and sets were good and actually had a medieval fantasy feel to them, which helped carry the movie nicely.
I was actually adequately entertained by the cheesiness of the movie.
My rating of director Jason Brooks's 2025 movie "The Death of Snow White" lands on a five out of ten stars.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThey built their own castle for the movie.
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 1.200.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 108.752 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 4.907 $
- 4. Mai 2025
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 108.752 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 50 Min.(110 min)
- Farbe
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