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Nov 18, 2024

The Top 10 Hunks of "The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina"

I'm about halfway through The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, the Netflix series revamping Sabrina the Teenage Witch from Archie Comics, although I must admit to fast-forwarding past the many smarmy scenes where Sabrina and her boyfriend Harvey discuss how much they love each other, care about each other, can't live without each other, would die for each other, etc., etc., etc.

The setting is beautifully realized.  Everybody in town lives in a creepy old house; teachers have offices full of heavy furniture and antique books; it's an antique horror movie bathed in sepia light.

I like the witches' religion, an over-the-top Satanism complete with Black Masses, names signed in blood, cannibalism, human sacrifices, and a grunting, goat-hoofed Dark Lord.  But it comes with many realistic, mundane touches, like casually saying "Praise Satan" the way fundamentalist Christians say "Praise the Lord."

I like the over-the-top acting, especially Sabrina's aunts, the dour "what will the other witches think?" Zelda and the cheery "have a cuppa" Hilda, who seems too nice to be evil.  I guess that's the point? 

Sabrina's Scoobies are also drawn with a very broad brush. There's Roz, the freethinking intellectual, who happens to be the daughter of the town minister (except everybody is Catholic); Suzie, the gender-fluid women's rights activist, who happens to be the daughter of a conservative farmer; and Harvey, a working-class jock whose father is downright abusive.  Daddy issues, anyone?

I'm not a big fan of Sabrina,  however: 16 years old, half mortal, half witch, torn between two worlds, gleefully using her magic to right the wrongs of her high school, while scheming to take down the Dark Lord himself.   Really?  Granted, she is the prophesied Chosen One.  Everyone has a vested interest her witchcraft success; Madame Satan, an Archie comics character from the 1950s, returns from oblivion to guide her; but still, that's a staggering amount of hubris.  Even Luke Skywalker waited until he was old enough to vote.

I really disliked a homophobic scene in which Sabrina and her allies get revenge on some bullying jocks (led by Ty Wood, left) by casting a spell to make them hug and kiss each other, then blackmailing them with the photographs.  Threatening to reveal that someone is gay?  Is being gay that shameful?

But, on the plus side, Cousin Ambrose gets a boyfriend, not a girlfriend.

And there's nearly as much beefcake as on Sabrina's sister show, Riverdale.

1. Longtime shirtless aficionado Ross Lynch as Harvey (top photo, right)

2. Ty Wood as the bully.

3. Chance Perdomo as Cousin Ambrose.

4. Darren Mann (left) as the boyfriend.







More after the break



5. Peter Bundic as Carl, another bully.


















6. Justin Dobies as Harvey's older brother (seen here rafting down the Mississippi with his brother Jackson in 2012)














7. Alessandro Juliani as Dr. Cee (Cerberus), owner of the coffee shop/bookstore where Hilda works, and eventually her boyfriend.

8. Gavin Leatherwood (great witch name!) as Nicholas Scratch, a student who befriends Sabrina at the witches' academy.







9. Richard Coyle as Father Blackwood, the high priest of the coven (which is either a local witch congregation or all witches everywhere).











10. Moses Thiessen as Ben the Pizza Boy, who had an affair with Ms. Grundy on Riverdale.  He shows up to deliver a pizza to Ms. Wardwell, who is actually the reincarnation of Madame Satan. It ends badly.


4 comments:

  1. You never realize the difficulty in crafting an occult setting until you see it done right.

    I think it's just cliché now: "All athletes are secretly gay. That's why they shower together, jerk off together, and would share a woman of one let them." (That last one is outright part of Heathers, which probably began the trope.) Yeah, it's homophobic af, you'll find people who were awkward in high school can be the most toxic because they equate it to Jim Crow or whatever.

    On the topic of Netflix, Big Mouth? Actually has gay and bi characters. And they're normal! I wish 90s sex ed had been that nice. (Gay sex education was just about AIDS.) I mean, as normal as a surrealist comedy about puberty can be.

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  2. I watched an episode of "Big Mouth." I didn't care for it. But there's a second season on Netflix, so maybe I'll try that.

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  3. I think it is supposed to be in the 1960s. But, there are so many glaring non-sixties things they ignore. Like another dimension 1960s. The music can be from the 1970s or later 1960s then their present year also. Not that it matters but, it becomes confusing. You can just barely see it in the costumes and the hairstyles. Then they all start speaking modern feminist style phrases and act like modern sexual and gender preference ideas were common then. Like the one girl having a sex change to a boy that everyone just seems to think is wonderful and to be cheered. Alternative 1960s for sure.

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    Replies
    1. It's definitely the modern era. Sabrina's parents were active in the 1990s. There are crossover characters with "Riverdale." They watch "classic" movies from the 1960s. There are cell phones. It's just slightly skewed because the witches live for a long time.

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