Hocus Pocus It’s Time Witches Face Mask
Hocus Pocus is a 1993 American comedy film directed by Kenny Ortega and written by Neil Cuthbert and Mick Garris. The film stars Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy, with Omri Katz, Thora Birch, and Vinessa Shaw in supporting roles. The film follows a villainous comedic trio of witches who are inadvertently resurrected by a teenage boy in Salem, Massachusetts, on Halloween night.
Topmago is introducing a related fabric face mask at our store, it's available today, Hocus Pocus It’s Time Witches Face Mask.
Hocus Pocus It’s Time Witches Face Mask Design
The black face mask with the Hocus Pocus signal, check this Hocus Pocus It’s Time Witches Face Mask !
Hocus Pocus It's Time Witches Face Mask |
Hocus Pocus It's Time Witches Face Mask |
Topmago is also interested in this film, hope people like it too.
More About Hocus Pocus
The film was released in the United States on July 16, 1993, by Walt Disney Pictures. The film received mixed to negative reviews from film critics at the time of its release. It was not a critical or commercial success upon its release, possibly losing Disney around $16.5 million. However, largely through annual airings on Disney Channel and Freeform (formerly ABC Family), Hocus Pocus has been rediscovered by audiences, resulting in a yearly spike in home video sales of the film every Halloween season that has helped make it a cult classic.
A sequel, directed by Adam Shankman, is in development as a Disney+ exclusive film, with a screenplay written by Jen D'Angelo.
Hocus Pocus Development
In the 1994 TV documentary Hocus Pocus: Begin the Magic, and on the film's Blu-ray release, producer David Kirschner said he came up with the idea for the film one night. He and his young daughter were sitting outside and his neighbor's black cat strayed by. Kirschner invented a tale of how the cat was once a boy who was changed into a feline three hundred years ago by three witches.
Hocus Pocus started life as a script by Mick Garris, that was bought by Walt Disney Pictures in 1984. The film's working title was Disney's Halloween House, it was much darker and scarier, and its protagonists were all 12-year-olds. Garris and Kirschner pitched it to Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment; Spielberg saw Disney as a competitor to Amblin in the family film market at the time and refused to co-produce a film with his "rival."