

Color, 2017, 102 mins. 42 secs.
Directed by Lukas Feigelfeld
Starring Aleksandra Cwen, Celina Peter, Claudia Martini, Tanja Petrovsky
Doppelganger Releasing (Blu-ray and DVD) (US RA/R1 HD), Indeed Film (Blu-ray and DVD) (Germany RB/R2 HD/PAL) / WS (2.35:1) (16:9)
ongoing popularity of
folk horror around the world doesn't seem to show any signs of slowing down this decade with the likes of The Witch, Sennentuntschi, Midsommar, and The Ritual offering different spins on pagan-themed tales of terror. To that list you can add Hagazussa, a slow-burning, German-language occult offering centered around a young woman's deterioration (in multiple senses of the word) in a remote 15th-century mountain dwelling.
on
several fronts as it speeds to a finale that wouldn't feel out of place in a Lars Von Trier film, with Cwen giving a committed and sometimes piercing performance that holds it all together. Incredibly, this was the first feature for director Lukas Feigelfeld and also his film school graduation project, so they must be doing something pretty crazy in those classrooms.
A selected director's English-language
audio commentary can be played as one stream or divided into four sections totaling 34m35s (with some interesting insight into some of the symbolism and themes he was shooting for), while a deleted scene (2m38s) also features optional commentary. A very low-key MMMD music video, the theatrical trailer, and a bonus Feigelfeld modern-day short film, "Interferenz" (48m33s), which features more dialogue than the entire main feature, are also included along with bonus trailers for Summer of Fear, Penance, and Alleluia.