Directed by Victoria Muspratt
Expectations: Low.
On the general scale:
On the B-movie scale:
Teen Sorcery is one of those movies that is predictable and cliched, but it’s enjoyable anyway. There’s no mystery to the plot — the audience is aware of what’s going on very early on — but somehow the film remains fun and engaging. I’ve got to credit this to a few things: the cast who all give fun performances as likeable characters (even the villains), the hilarious 1999 low-budget CG, and the “anything goes” B-Movie mentality giving us scenes like a Frisbee game in medieval times. I always enjoy the “America by way of Romania” setting the Moonbeam films usually carry, too. I could probably use all of those points to take the film to task, but where’s the fun in that? This is entertainment!
Dawn (A.J. Cook) is a high school kid moving from California to Pilgrimtown, Massachusetts. On the way to the new house, she falls asleep in the car. Seen through an extreme fish-eye lens, Dawn dreams of being trapped in a house. She eventually enters a large room where a girl sits tied to a chair with a burlap sack over her head. She removes the sack to find… HERSELF! Spooky! She runs away, but a witch attacks her and then turns into a spider. Does any of this foreshadow the film’s plot? No, not really (except the witch), but it sure is a fun way to open a movie!
Spooky! What a jerk! Dawn is ostracized as the new girl, but manages to find friends when she sits down for lunch with three other outcasts: Flo, Franny and Mary. Together they unravel a spooky history of witchcraft in Pilgrimtown that might surprise you if you were a little kid, but will be obvious if you’re not.
It’s hard for me to look at Teen Sorcery objectively and find fault with it because I honestly did nothing but enjoy myself throughout the entirety of the movie. Perhaps it was the novelty of having a primarily female cast (something rare in these Moonbeam films). Perhaps it was the legitimately good acting from just about the entire cast. The only bad spots are the expected Romanian actors with dubbed-in American voices, but unlike many Moonbeam films, these roles are limited to characters with only a few lines. It probably helped, too, that the last couple of Full Moon movies I watched were of the modern variety where the goal is more to stretch an idea to feature-length than actually make a compelling movie. Teen Sorcery felt stuffed with fun, moving at a brisk pace from one hairy situation to the next.
Teen Sorcery is not available on DVD, but you can check it out through Full Moon Streaming!
Next time I get around to a Full Moon movie, I’ll be checking out a non-Full Moon movie that’s kinda related: David Keith’s 1987 film starring Wil Wheaton, The Curse! See ya then!