Witchcraft in neighboring communities: a comparative analysis

By admin

Witch Witch Neighboring: In the world of magic and witchcraft, it is widely believed that witches tend to live close to one another. This concept of "witch witch neighboring" suggests that witches prefer to live in proximity to each other for various reasons. One reason for this phenomenon is the need for a supportive community. Witches, like any other individuals, crave a sense of belonging and understanding. By living near other witches, they can find a community that shares their beliefs, practices, and experiences. This fosters a sense of camaraderie and support, as fellow witches can relate to and empathize with one another.



Chronicles of narnia white witch actress

After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

Technopaganess 2005-11-30 07:40:35 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

No. This is Cate Blanchett. Great actress. Never seen her on Star Trek.

cathy 2005-11-30 17:04:14 UTC On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 07:40:35 GMT, "Technopaganess"

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen

Post by Ar Q
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.
No. This is Cate Blanchett. Great actress. Never seen her on Star Trek.
Lava

It is not Cate Blanchett. The actress is Tilda Swinton.
The Borg Queen in Star Trek was Alice Kirge.

They could all three pass as sisters, if not identical triplets. Same
gene pool.

Stan Brown 2005-12-01 12:39:25 UTC This post might be inappropriate. Click to display it. Palpie 2005-11-30 07:44:28 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

No mention of any appearance on any Trek.

Technopaganess 2005-11-30 17:32:19 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0842770/
No mention of any appearance on any Trek.

Holy crap. Those two can be twins! Thanks

Ken from Chicago 2005-11-30 12:43:39 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I have one
question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever played one of the Borg
Queens? Besides the White Witch has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is
the White Witch. Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

-- Ken from Chicago

jayembee 2005-11-30 18:03:52 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I
have one question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever
played one of the Borg Queens? Besides the White Witch
has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is the White Witch.
Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

In the time it took you to post that question, you could've looked
up the film at the IMDb, clicked on the name of the actress
playing the White Witch, and checked to see if she had any
Star Trek credits.

Michael Alan Chary 2005-11-30 20:41:07 UTC

Post by Ar Q
After seeing trailer of The Chronicles of Narnia many times, I
have one question. Has the actress playing White Witch ever
played one of the Borg Queens? Besides the White Witch
has hair, I am almost certain Borg Queen is the White Witch.
Maybe Borg Empire originates from the realm of Narnia.

In the time it took you to post that question, you could've looked
up the film at the IMDb, clicked on the name of the actress
playing the White Witch, and checked to see if she had any
Star Trek credits.

And in the time it took you to write that, you could have wrote "Tilda
Swinton" and "No."
--
The All-New, All-Different Howling Curmudgeons!
http://www.whiterose.org/howlingcurmudgeons
jayembee 2005-12-01 00:24:45 UTC

Post by jayembee
In the time it took you to post that question, you could've looked
up the film at the IMDb, clicked on the name of the actress
playing the White Witch, and checked to see if she had any
Star Trek credits.

"Tilda Swinton" and "No."

Give a man a fish.

Ar Q 2005-11-30 23:39:19 UTC

Post by jayembee
In the time it took you to post that question, you could've looked
up the film at the IMDb, clicked on the name of the actress
playing the White Witch, and checked to see if she had any
Star Trek credits.

I did search IMBb and found no reference. But it could be that the actress
feels shameful of playing Borg queen in her early career. Also, I was told
that there are many actresses playing Borg queen, but I can never see the
difference. They all look the same to me.

Brian Thorn 2005-12-01 00:04:14 UTC

Post by jayembee
In the time it took you to post that question, you could've looked
up the film at the IMDb, clicked on the name of the actress
playing the White Witch, and checked to see if she had any
Star Trek credits.

I did search IMBb and found no reference. But it could be that the actress
feels shameful of playing Borg queen in her early career. Also, I was told
that there are many actresses playing Borg queen, but I can never see the
difference. They all look the same to me.

The Borg Queen was played by Alice Kriga in the "First Contact" movie
and the Voyager finale, and by Susannah Thompson in several Voyager
episodes in between.

Neither has anything to be ashamed of.

Flashback: Nicole Kidman Was Rumored to Be Playing the White Witch in 2004

In early 2004, as fans eagerly awaited details about the upcoming movie adaptation of The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, a bombshell story landed. It claimed Nicole Kidman (Moulin Rouge!, The Hours) had been cast as The White Witch. The Oscar-winner had reportedly been seen in New Zealand, where filming would take place.

The false report is now believed to be the result of a comical misunderstanding. Watch this video for more details:

Two months later, it was finally announced that Tilda Swinton had been cast in the role. Meanwhile, Kidman would go to play an antagonist in The Golden Compass (2007).

The Archives of Old NarniaWeb
2020 will mark 15 years since the release of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Each month, NarniaWeb will look back at notable news and rumors that sent fans reeling as they anticipated Narnia’s big screen debut. This first episode is available for all, but the rest of the series will be an exclusive for Friends and Knights of NarniaWeb.

8 Responses

Glenwit says:

When I heard how the rumor started….Andrew Adamson location scouting in NZ and someone spotted him and thought he was Nicole Kidman….I almost spit coffee everywhere.
That is just hilarious.
Historically, I have preferred relatively unknown actors for roles like this, but sometimes a big name can truly knock a performance out of the park in an unexpected way (Heath Ledger as the Joker comes to mind here). It’s definitely a double edged sword, but I think it depends on the role.

JFG II says:

I hope whomever is cast in the new Narnia adaptations are good actors, regardless of their notoriety. Or love from fans.
I’d be interested if the lead kid from ‘jojo rabbit’ was cast as 12-year-old Digory Kirk, even though the actor is gaining fame monthly – and really, NO kid could play him perfectly, and the kid actors from ‘jojo rabbit’ were phenomenal.
But I would love the actress cast as The Witch to knock our socks off, someone we fans would not pick but is scarily perfect for Jadis.

Cleander says:

Wait, that’s seriously how it got started? That’s hilarious!! XDXD
I’d heard about stories about this rumor when I first joined Narniaweb.

Skilletdude says:

Nicole Kidman probably would have been adequate in the role. I think at the time, though, most of the fans wanted an actress who wasn’t as recognizable, and that’s what we ultimately got with Tilda Swinton. Yes, Barbara Kellerman was too loud, and I think Swinton was too timid. What approach would Kidman have taken had the rumor been true? Interesting to think about.

Keeper of Lantern Waste says:

I’d like Cate Blanchette as Jadis. Probably too expensive but dang I think she’d be awesome! Incidentally, did you enjoy Jojo Rabbit? I wanted to see it but was too busy

JFG II says:

a. It would be awsome if she played Jadis, since she’s already played a [good] witch and an [evil] emperess before, both to glorious effect. b. 7.5/10 I was both very entertained and very moved by it, but the tone was all over the place: Sometimes it’s hilarious, sometimes it’s deadly serious. Sometimes it’s muddled and murky in intent. (I’m not related to anybody or anything involved in WWII Europe, so it’s not to personal to me. ) Not everyone will like it. Some people will hate / dismiss it as being too nice towards nazis, even though the movie exists to be a smack-down of nazi-ideology. It’s good. Maybe even great.

Tumnus says:

I agree, in 2005 I knew very little about Tilda Swinton while I’ve seen Nicole Kidman in films since the 80’s. She certainly could have pulled off the role, but for a Narnia film I want to be absorbed in the story to the greatest extent possible and a star would distract from that some.

Swinton puts on white hat for ‘Narnia’

“Narnia” director Andrew Adamson — due in Cannes in a few days for the Competition showing of DreamWorks’ “Shrek 2,” which he co-directed — confirmed that Swinton has boarded the project as the evil White Witch. Fellow redhead Nicole Kidman was rumored to be in discussions for the role as recently as last month, but those reports turned out to be false.

Budgeted at more than $100 million, according to sources, the Walden Media/Walt Disney Co. co-production is scheduled to begin shooting in the summer in Adamson’s native New Zealand. “The Lion, the Witch & the Wardrobe” is the first installment of Walden’s planned “Chronicles of Narnia” franchise, based on the series of classic children’s fantasy books by C.S. Lewis.

Adamson is making his live-action debut on the project, with a Christmas 2005 release already slated via Walt Disney Pictures, which also is distributing Walden’s “Around the World in 80 Days” in the summer.

The story of Narnia revolves around the Pevensie siblings — Lucy, Susan, Edmund and Peter — who go through a magic wardrobe and enter the world of Narnia, a once peaceful land of talking beasts, dwarfs and giants that has since become frozen by the evil White Witch (Swinton). The four children then help the lion Aslan break the witch’s spell.

The role marks a departure from Swinton’s more recent art house work. The actress is known for her wide-ranging credits from the quirky “Adaptation” and the sexually charged “Young Adam” to the mind-bending “Teknolust.” She next appears in the indie ensemble “Thumbsucker,” followed by Warner Bros. Pictures’ “Constantine” opposite Keanu Reeves.

Separately, Disney said it would release a “Narnia” video in time for the 2005 holiday season. Adamson will be involved with the video game production team during the simultaneous development of the game and the movie.

“We’re very early, so we’re not announcing the developer choice yet,” said Graham Hopper, senior vice president and general manager of Disney’s Buena Vista Games unit.

This fosters a sense of camaraderie and support, as fellow witches can relate to and empathize with one another. They can exchange knowledge, insights, and even help each other in times of need. Another reason for the prevalence of witch witch neighboring is the importance of magical energy and resources.

Witch witch neighboring

Witches often require specific ingredients, tools, or environments to conduct their rituals and spells effectively. By living close to other witches, they can easily access and share these resources. It creates a network of magical energy that amplifies their individual powers and capabilities. Moreover, living near other witches can also serve as a source of inspiration and motivation. Witnessing the practices and achievements of fellow witches can fuel their own magical pursuits. It allows them to learn from each other, adapt new techniques, and push the boundaries of their magical abilities. This constant exchange and interaction help them grow and evolve as witches. However, it is essential to note that witch witch neighboring is not limited to physical proximity alone. In today's interconnected world, witches can also find virtual communities and support networks through social media platforms and online forums. Despite the absence of physical distance, the sense of belonging and support remains strong. In conclusion, witch witch neighboring is a common occurrence within the witchcraft community. Whether through physical closeness or virtual connections, witches seek to be near each other for the sake of community, resource sharing, inspiration, and personal growth. This phenomenon highlights the importance of social connection and collaboration in the magical world of witches..

Reviews for "The role of witchcraft in neighboring communities today"

- Jane Smith - 2/5 - "I didn't really enjoy 'Witch Witch Neighboring'. I found the plot to be predictable and the characters lacked depth. The story didn't grab my attention and I found myself getting bored halfway through. Overall, it just wasn't my cup of tea."
- Tom Anderson - 3/5 - "I have mixed feelings about 'Witch Witch Neighboring'. While I appreciate the effort put into creating a unique world and magical elements, I found the pacing to be too slow for my taste. Additionally, some parts of the story felt forced and lacking in originality. It had potential, but it fell short for me."
- Sarah Johnson - 2/5 - "I was disappointed with 'Witch Witch Neighboring'. The writing style didn't resonate with me and I found myself skimming through the pages. The character development was lacking, making it difficult for me to connect with any of them. The dialogue also felt forced at times. Overall, it was a forgettable read for me."
- Michael Thompson - 1/5 - "I couldn't finish 'Witch Witch Neighboring'. The writing was unengaging and the plot felt disjointed. The pacing was off and nothing seemed to happen to keep my interest. The characters were forgettable and I found myself not caring about what happened to them. I wouldn't recommend this book."

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