The Craft (1996)
Description:
DS Movie Poster
- Style B
Item Description:
Original, double-sided, Style B, rolled
Year: 1996
Condition: Mint
Dimension: 27" x 40"
Genre: Horror
DS or
double-sided original
one Sheet
movie poster that
has printing on both the front and the back of the poster (printing on back side
is a mirror image of printing on the front side).
This movie art item is an authentic original piece - the same
item that is used in actual movie theaters. Original movie art items are
valued by collectors worldwide and can increase in value over time.
Cast: Fairuza Balk, Neve Campbell, Robin Tunney,
Rachel True, Skeet Ulrich, Christine Taylor, Breckin Meyer, Cliff De Young,
Assumpta Serna, Helen Shaveri;
Director: Andrew Fleming
Synopsis:
After killing her mother in childbirth, growing up in San Francisco with her
father and stepmother, attempting suicide, and moving to Los Angeles, Sarah
(Robin Tunney) makes a brief stab at popularity at her new Catholic high school.
Ostracized due to the untrue kiss-and-tell tales of football player Chris (Skeet
Ulrich), Sarah reluctantly befriends a trio of self-styled outsiders: the
horribly scarred Bonnie (Neve Campbell), the trailer-trash Nancy (Fairuza Balk),
and Rochelle (Rachel True), a frequent victim of anti-black prejudice at the
hands of Laura Lizzie (former Marcia Brady and future Mrs. Ben Stiller,
Christine Taylor). After exhibiting latent telekenitic powers in front of
Bonnie, Sarah learns that her three new friends have chosen her as their "fourth
corner," the final member of their supernatural coven. Using tools stolen from a
local incense-and-candle-filled boutique for practitioners of magic, the quartet
summons the power of Manon, a primitive deity, to exact revenge on their
tormentors and transform their lives. Drunk with power, they watch their spells
get out of control, and the new coven soon realizes that with magic, "whatever
you give comes back three-fold." This mid-'90s horror flick scored first place
at the box office its opening weekend despite its then-unknown cast and modest
budget. TV star Neve Campbell, who didn't even receive top billing, would go on
to become the '90s answer to '70s horror queen Jamie Lee Curtis in the Scream
franchise.