Son | Seventh

The relationship between Tom and the witch-girl Alice often seems forced and reduces the tension. The Verdict: Entertaining Trash or Forgotten Fantasy?

Seventh Son: A Review of Jeff Bridges' Wild Fantasy Ride If you are craving a nostalgic, early-2000s style fantasy movie with high-stakes action, creatures, and a touch of the supernatural, (2015) is a film that offers exactly that—for better or worse. Based loosely on Joseph Delaney’s The Spook's Apprentice , the movie brings together a stellar cast for a straightforward "good vs. evil" battle. But did it deliver a new fantasy franchise, or is it destined to be forgotten? The Premise: Knights, Witches, and the Dark Seventh Son

While it may not be a cinematic masterpiece, Seventh Son has a charm similar to Dragonheart —entertaining if you don't look too closely at the plot holes. If you like fantasy movies that are pure spectacle, it's worth a watch, but don't expect a profound story. 2.5/5 Spooks. The relationship between Tom and the witch-girl Alice

The story revolves around Thomas Ward (Ben Barnes), the seventh son of a seventh son, who has the innate ability to see creatures of the dark. He is drafted by Master Gregory (Jeff Bridges), a gruff "Spook" or witch hunter, to stop the escape of Mother Malkin (Julianne Moore), a shapeshifting sorceress. The Good: Bridges and Visual Spectacle Based loosely on Joseph Delaney’s The Spook's Apprentice

Focus more on the or specific characters (like Julianne Moore)

style post, looking back at it a decade later. Let me know which direction works best! “Seventh Son” – the good, the bad, and the ugly

Seventh Son feels like a, "hot mess of a movie," according to some critics , lacking the depth that made the source book popular. Critics found the plot, "bland" and predictable.