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The Wicker Man

Flesh to touch...Flesh to burn! Don't keep the Wicker Man waiting!
1973 | 93m | English

(102262 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Police sergeant Neil Howie is called to an island village in search of a missing girl whom the locals claim never existed. Stranger still, however, are the rituals that take place there.
Release Date: Dec 06, 1973
Director: Robin Hardy
Writer: Anthony Shaffer, David Pinner
Genres: Horror
Keywords scotland, based on novel or book, cemetery, island, virgin, sacrifice, ritual, investigation, cult, human sacrifice, disappearance, rural area, paganism, policeman, bonfire, psychotronic, voyeurism, may day, folk horror, song, sea plane, harvest festival, horror musical
Production Companies British Lion Films
Box Office Revenue: $513,000
Budget: $810,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Edward Woodward Sergeant Neil Howie
Christopher Lee Lord Summerisle
Britt Ekland Willow MacGreagor
Diane Cilento Miss Rose
Ingrid Pitt Librarian
Roy Boyd Broome
Lesley Mackie Daisy
Walter Carr School Master
Irene Sunters May Morrison
Lindsay Kemp Alder MacGreagor
Ian Campbell Oak
Kevin Collins Old Fisherman
Aubrey Morris Old Gardener / Gravedigger
Russell Waters Harbour Master
Donald Eccles T.H. Lennox
Gerry Cowper Rowan Morrison
Leslie Blackater Hairdresser
Peter Brewis Musician
Barbara Rafferty Woman with Baby
Juliet Cadzow Villager
Ross Campbell Communicant
Penny Cluer Gillie
Michael Cole Musician
Ian Cutler Musician
Myra Forsyth Mrs Grimmond
John Hallam McTaggert
Alison Hughes Fiancée to Howie
Charles Kearney Butcher
Fiona Kennedy Holly
John McGregor Baker
Jimmy Mackenzie Briar
Jennifer Martin Myrtle Morrison
Bernard Murray Musician
Helen Norman Villager
Lorraine Peters Girl on Grave
Tony Roper Postman
John Sharp Doctor Ewan
Elizabeth Sinclair Villager
Andrew Tompkins Musician
Ian Wilson Communicant
Richard Wren Ash Buchanan
John Young Fishmonger
Robin Hardy Minister (uncredited)
Muriel Greenslade Old Woman in Library (uncredited)
Annie Ross Willow MacGreagor (voice) (uncredited)
George Oliver Parishioner (uncredited)
Fred Wood Parishioner (Singing Hymn In Church) (uncredited)
Name Job
Sue Merry Continuity
Denis Whitehouse Assistant Editor
James Devis Camera Operator
Peter Allwork Second Unit Director of Photography
Beryl Harvey Production Secretary
Mike Drew Focus Puller
Gary Carpenter Music Director
Stuart Hopps Choreographer
Anthony Shaffer Screenplay
David Pinner Novel
Robin Hardy Director
Harry Waxman Director of Photography
Paul Giovanni Original Music Composer
W.T. Partleton Makeup Artist
Robin Gregory Sound
Ted Morley Production Manager
Bronco McLoughlin Stunts
Vernon Messenger Sound Editor
Masada Wilmot Wardrobe Supervisor
Jan Dorman Hairstylist
Sue Yelland Costume Design
Seamus Flannery Art Direction
Maggie Cartier Casting
Eric Boyd-Perkins Editor
Mike Gowans Unit Manager
Jake Wright Assistant Director
Bob Jones Sound
Jilda Smith Location Manager
John Brown Still Photographer
Name Title
Peter Snell Producer
Organization Category Person
BAFTA Awards Best Actor Edward Woodward Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 26 34 18
2024 5 31 48 25
2024 6 25 39 17
2024 7 30 46 19
2024 8 21 33 14
2024 9 25 37 15
2024 10 27 36 18
2024 11 26 50 14
2024 12 22 40 12
2025 1 21 29 15
2025 2 16 28 4
2025 3 7 25 2
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 3 2
2025 6 3 3 2
2025 7 3 3 2
2025 8 3 4 2
2025 9 3 4 3
2025 10 3 4 3

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2025 7 309 674
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2025 6 441 815
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2025 5 471 721
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2025 4 170 409
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2025 3 242 412
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2024 11 650 706
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 298 790
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 728 728

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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

I believe in the life eternal, as promised to us by our Lord, Jesus Christ. Mainland Sergeant Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) flies off to the remote Scottish island of Summerisle to investigate the disappearance of a 12 year old girl. What he finds is a culture steeped in Paganism, presided over by ... Lord Summerisle (Christopher Lee). Meeting static and indifference wherever he goes - and being driven to anger by the assault on his Christian beliefs - Howie is very much a man alone and most likely in grave danger? Directed by Robin Hardy and adapted to screen by Anthony Shaffer from David Pinner's novel, Ritual, The Wicker Man is very much a cult masterpiece. The back stories to it could make a film all by itself, be it censor baiting, studio cuts, body doubles or just plain offending religious groups, it's a film that is well worth looking into via the top range home format releases. From the moment Howie (a truly brilliant Woodward) lands at Summerisle everything seems off, there's a sinister atmosphere pervading the story. He is met by unnerving imagery wherever he goes, songs and rituals gnawing away at his senses, there's even eroticism deftly placed within the film's master plan. He doesn't know what's going on, and neither do we, this is a mystery right? There is after all a missing child to be found, right? But once Lord Summerisle (Lee also terrific) enters proceedings and ups his game, things unravel in edgy fashion, building up to the justifiably famous and harrowing finale. Some modern horror fans may baulk at the lack of bloody carnage et al, but this is classic horror. A horror film bulging with intelligence and pulsing away with literate smarts. 9/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

Well the cinema was packed as we all sat though what seemed like an interminable preamble of interviews with those connected with the film - including Britt Ekland - before it all started. Was it worth it? Well, I didn't really think so. Policeman "Howie" (Edward Woodward) arrives on a remote Scotti ... sh island after reports that a girl has gone missing. He is perplexed by the seemingly indifferent attitude of the locals who claim that she never existed or her mother who claims that she is six feet under in the graveyard. He becomes even more bemused by the general attitude of the villagers - led by their laird "Lord Summerisle" (Christopher Lee) and taught by their not quite "Jean Brodie" schoolteacher "Miss Rose" (Diane Cilento) to life in cereal, and to his presence in particular. Soon, his investigation starts to lead him a merry dance as he begins to suspect something way more sinister is afoot - and boy, is he correct. Thing is, though, can he find and save the missing girl and get to the bottom of this mystery. To be fair, it does offer us a more sophisticated, almost mythological, approach to an horror movie loaded with mysticism and pagan ritual. Indeed, I don't know that it fits well into that genre at all - it's more of a psychological thriller populated by a decent cast of household names. The thing for me is the story. I just found it all a bit weak; it takes far, far too long to build up anything like an head of steam and is really rather over-scored with music that is left do too much of the heavy lifting when it comes to generating the sparing senses of peril this film elicits. Perhaps it isn't fair to look upon it critically forty years later, when so many of our sensitivities have been eroded away, but I really couldn't figure out quite what all the fuss was about. It's now a cult film - and maybe that says it all? Worth a watch, but a television leaves nothing missing, I'd say.

Jul 23, 2023
OuroborosSurfer
10.0

Here Edward Woodward stars as Sgt. Howie, a Christian Scottish policeman sent to the remote island of Summerisle to investigate the disappearance of a young girl. The horror of the Wicker Man is not the obvious kind that hits you in the face with a hammer, but quietly creeps up on you. The way t ... he pagan villagers act indifferently or defensively to the supposed disappearance or murder of a child is disturbing, especially as everyone seems to be hiding something, including the girl's classmates. One criticism of the various heavily cut versions of the film is that not quite enough time is given to that subtle process of building up the suspense and atmosphere of the film. The Director's Cut, however, is a small masterpiece. The central idea of this closed-off pagan community, generally peaceful but indulging in the rare bit of ritual of human sacrifice, is delicious. Woodward as Howie is on top acting form, as is the legendary Christopher Lee as Lord Summerisle. Economical storytelling ratchets up suspense and mystery. Additionally, the film boasts one of the best and most fitting soundtracks I've ever heard, comprised mostly of in world folk songs rather than generic "spooky" music. The ending of The Wicker Man must go down as one of the most shocking in cinema history. Since the film plays it relatively cool until that point, the payoff is all the more harrowingly believable. I also enjoyed the idea that, in terms of what may lie beyond death from the point of view of the characters, both Howie and the islanders get some kind of "reward" from the final ritual. The islanders get the reassurance that their crops will thrive in the coming year, while Howie gets his martyr's death and the expectation of a special place in heaven. The film made me think a lot about belief systems; who is to say paganism is less valid than any other system of religion? All religions are sustained by faith and passion rather than reason or evidence. Thought-provoking, strangely beautiful, and just plain creepy, the restored version of The Wicker Man deserves its cult status. Even if you're not usually a fan of horror, you're likely to take something away from this burnt offering. The word "classic" was invented for this brilliant and eccentric film.

Nov 07, 2023