The Sunday Post (Dundee)

‘The land contains all these stories. We could feel themthere’

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- By Siobhan Synnot news@sundaypost.com She Will screens in cinemas from Friday

It is inspired by one of the darkest times in Scotland’s history but award- winning movie She Will brings the terrible persecutio­n of women condemned as witches into the here and now.

A supernatur­al chiller, directed and co-written by Charlotte Colbert, the film was produced by horror maestro Dario Argento and the cast includes Star Trek’s Alice Krige, My Best Friend’s Wedding’s Rupert Everett and Clockwork Orange legend Malcolm Mcdowell.

However, for the director, the real star of the film is Scotland, even though her six-week location shoot in the depths of winter risked freezing and frightenin­g her cast.

Colbert said: “Scotland is dramatic. When we were filming in the Cairngorms we were either ankle- deep in mud or skating on frozen earth – but the beauty and drama of the landscape helped feed into the film.”

Colbert’s debut feature film covers a lot of thematic ground, from Gothic horror to personal revenge to feminism and the Me Too movement, but it is rooted in Scotland’s history of witchcraft and how that past has been remembered.

For centuries women were burned alive at the stake or hanged for heresy. Those accused of practising witchcraft were hunted down and put to death across Europe – with Scotland marked out as the biggest persecutor. In the 17th and 18th Centuries, more than 4,000 women were put to death, leading to a modern campaign to pardon the witchhunt victims.

Nicola Sturgeon formally apologised on Internatio­nal Women’s Day but a bill intended to lead to an official pardon for those tortured and often executed under the Witchcraft Act 1563 has been launched at Holryood where supporters say righting the historical wrong will ease the battle against misogyny and prejudice today.

Colbert, who is based in Sussex, said: “We were filming in the place where the last woman accused of witchcraft was burned. It’s a very fascinatin­g place because the land seems to contain all those stories and tragedies. It’s something we could feel while filming,”

She Will stars Alice Krige as an actress recovering from breast cancer who travels to the Highlands with her nurse in order to recuperate in peace. To her dismay, she’s not alone: her bolthole is part of an arty retreat and a motley crew of new- age residents, led by a flamboyant Rupert Everett in pearl earrings and an Indiana Jones hat, are excited to have a famous actress in their midst.

The remote location is also the site of historic witch-burning, and soon ghostly memories are disturbing­ly revived.

Shooting around the Cairngorms required Everett and Krige braving lochside breezes and late- night shoots to make the most of the landscapes. “My favourite of all the places we found was right in the middle of nature with a little river at the bottom and wild animals and a little cabin at the top of the track,” said Colbert.

“I thought it was amazing but the production team were literally sweating and I could see that they were thinking: ‘if we forget so much as a sock, it’s going to take an hour and a half to go back down and fetch it’.”

Not everything went to plan, she admitted. A scene had been written where one of the characters is surprised on a night walk by a wild fox. On the day a rather different beast was supplied by the animal handlers. Colbert said: “The fox making his guest appearance was Basil the overweight fox, who arrived filled with shortbread.”

She Will won the Golden Leopard for Best First Film at the Locarno Film Festival and was in the official selection at the London Film Festival, the Sitges Fantastic Fest in Spain and Thessaloni­ki.

The filmmaker is particular­ly proud that they managed to use a real haunted house as Krige’s spooky retreat.

Bannockbur­n House in Stirling dates back to 1675, and in the 18th Century Bonnie Prince Charlie made it his HQ when he was trying to drum up support for the Jacobite cause.

More recently it’s been a popular hotspot for ghost hunters because of its spooky rooms and sightings of a murdered king roaming the halls and a young woman glimpsed by the balcony,

Colbert said: “It’s a surreal location. Kota Eberhead, one of our lead actors, and Liam, who is in our crew, both claim they definitely saw a ghost there.”

However, some of the house’s chills were easier to explain: Bannockbur­n House also had no central heating.

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 ?? ?? She Will Director Charlotte Colbert, right, and star Alice Krige
Picture Agencia EFE
She Will Director Charlotte Colbert, right, and star Alice Krige Picture Agencia EFE
 ?? ?? Stills from She Will filmed on location across Scotland
Stills from She Will filmed on location across Scotland

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