Parents' Guide to The Witches

Movie PG 1990 91 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

By Nell Minow , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 9+

Some kids will love it, some may find disturbing.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 9+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 9+

Based on 12 parent reviews

age 10+

Based on 27 kid reviews

Kids say that this 1986 film is a classic yet disturbing depiction of witches that combines important messages about safety with a dark and scary atmosphere. While some children found it terrifying, others viewed it as just weird or mildly disturbing, making it a mixed experience depending on the viewer's sensitivity to scary narratives.

  • scary scenes
  • parental caution
  • mixed reactions
  • important messages
  • age-sensitive viewing
Summarized with AI

What's the Story?

Luke hears about witches from his grandmother (Mai Zetterling). She says they have to wear gloves to hide their claw-like hands and shoes that fit their square feet without toes, and that they are bald and scratch under their wigs. They have a purple gleam in their eyes. They are evil and they steal children, who are never seen again. Luke's parents are killed, and his grandmother takes him to England. When she is diagnosed with mild diabetes, the doctor advises a vacation, so they go to Cornwall. As it happens, a convention of all the witches in England is staying in the same hotel, posing as the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Their leader is slinky, black-clad Eva Ernst (Anjelica Huston). Luke overhears her telling the witches to wipe out all the children in England by turning them into mice, and he watches as she demonstrates by giving a potion to a greedy child named Bruno, transforming him into a mouse. The witches find Luke, and after a chase, capture him and turn him into a mouse. With the help of his grandmother, he steals some of the potion, and puts it into the soup to be served to the witches, who are all turned to mice, except for Eva's assistant. Luke manages to get Eva's trunkful of money, along with her notebook listing the addresses of all the witches in America, and he and his grandmother plan to go after them.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 12 ):
Kids say ( 27 ):

This story has a genuinely twisted flavor that some children will love and others will find disturbing. Children may be upset not only by the witches, but by the death (offscreen) of Luke's parents, and by his seeming indifference to it.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the notion of witches. Are you fascinated or disturbed by the idea of these strange women with magical powers?

  • Why do you think most witches are portrayed as evil?

Movie Details

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