history of fantasy films, Russia and its onetime territories like Estonia have only rarely
dabbled in outright horror. The most famous example is easily Viy, with other oddities that step into the genre more or less include Dead Mountaineer's Hotel and Tear of the Prince of Darkness. A real surprise for many international viewers when it first hit DVD, the Soviet-era Belarusian production The Savage Hunt of King Stakh adapts a dense, folkloric novel from 1964 by Uladzimir Karatkievich, blending murder mystery and the possibly supernatural into a rich Gothic tapestry that makes for perfect viewing late on a chilly evening.
in the bloodline he feels responsible for his death, with Nadezhda and
her few remaining eccentric relations the last in line. Soon another man of rationality and science, Svetilovich (Kharitonov), enters the mix as well, all of the swirling in a hallucinatory string of events including a naked woman submerged in feathery down, a macabre puppet show, suspicious servants, colorful relatives, and a snowy climax filled with revelations.
Though it got a fair amount of festival play in the early '80s after being shot
at the end of the prior decade, The Savage Hunt of King Stakh was a film far more spoken of than seen for many years. A DVD from Ruscico clocking in at 105m1s (with really awful interlacing) featured Russian 1.0 mono and 5.1 surround audio options, plus 5.1 English and French dubs with Russian, English, French, German, Spanish, or Italian subtitles. Extra include an interview with director Valery Rubinchik (12m24s) about the film's tricky genre classification, filmographies for the director and main actors, and a photo album (of frame grabs). This 2002 release wasn't part of the U.S. distribution deal Ruscico made with Image Entertainment, so it was much trickier to track down and didn't stay in circulation for very long.
bits rather than entire standalone sequences; apparently the film was trimmed in an attempt to speed up the pacing that instead just made it a bit choppier. Obviously the detail here is
much better with no more ugly interlacing, and the color scheme shifts to a more foreboding, earthy look here compared to the green and blue appearance of the DVD. The LPCM 1.0 mono Russian audio sounds excellent and features good English optional subtitles. Also included are a pair of robust and very different audio commentaries with Stephen R. Bissette and Mike White each going solo; the former dives headlong into the source novel with extensive comparisons and narrated excerpts, while White draws in a lot of comparisons to relevant Russian cinema and other genre connections. The folk horror angle gets the primary focus in the two video extras, a wonderfully articulate and perceptive video introduction (13m1s) by Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched filmmaker Kier-La Janisse who covers the nationalist attitudes of Belarus at the time and its impact on genre storytelling, and "The Wild, Wild Hunt of King Stakh" (16m10s), a video essay by Evan Chester charting the movement's origins with Shirley Jackson and the big three British films on through this film and more recent offerings as well as other possible cinematic influences. Deaf Crocodile Blu-ray
Ruscico DVD