“The Autopsy of Jane Doe” – Surprised by Witchcraft

I’d heard quite a lot of positive buzz about The Autopsy of Jane Doe. Since I added it to my Blu-ray collection I watched it Saturday. I don’t have much to say about it other than it was a satisfying horror film that focuses more on suspense and the creep factor than gore. Even the nudity of the main autopsy victim isn’t gratuitous. One surprising aspect of it, however, (spoiler alert) is the inclusion of a variation on the evil witch trope. I didn’t see the witchcraft angle coming, and I’m surprised this hasn’t been featured more, either in interviews with the director or in commentary related to the film.

Synopsis

It’s just another night at the morgue for a father (Brian Cox) and son (Emile Hirsch) team of coroners, until an unidentified, highly unusual corpse comes in. Discovered buried in the basement of the home of a brutally murdered family, the young Jane Doe—eerily well preserved and with no visible signs of trauma—is shrouded in mystery. As they work into the night to piece together the cause of her death, the two men begin to uncover the disturbing secrets of her life. Soon, a series of terrifying events make it clear: this Jane Doe may not be dead. The latest from Trollhunter director Andre Ovredal is a scarily unpredictable, supernatural shocker that never lets up.

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