Jason Brooks’s 2025 indie shocker The Death of Snow White reimagines the classic fairy tale as a visceral horror–fantasy mash-up. This fan-film meets slasher riff turns the “fairest of them all” story into a gory spectacle, trading delicate romance for rivers of red. After a witch massacres the queen in a prologue drenched in brutal practical effects, an infant Snow White is whisked to safety.
Years later, the newly crowned Evil Queen relies on blood magic—bathing in virgin flesh and feeding on heart’s desire—to freeze her youth. When one of Snow’s friends vanishes at the Queen’s command, Snow flees into a haunted forest and falls in with seven banished dwarfs (including a towering “Tiny”).
The film wears its low budget as a badge of honor, with crude yet committed creature designs and no-holds-barred gore. It asks viewers to lean into its campy humor—laden with profanity and nudity—while bracing for slasher set pieces that flip Snow White’s purity on its head. Ideal for genre buffs, this is a take you’ll want to watch with friends late at night, flashlight in hand, ready to cheer or cringe at every severed limb.
Flight through the Dark Woods
The movie unfolds like an urgent fever dream. It begins with a medieval castle under siege: torches flicker, guards fall, the pregnant queen bleeds out. That opening assault establishes the stakes and hints at Jason Brooks’s taste for practical carnage. Cut to an adult Snow (Sanae Loutsis), blissfully unaware of court politics, celebrating with her circle of friends. When the huntsmen arrive—chains and bloody axes in tow—Chaos erupts and Snow bolts into the “Dark Woods.”
Here the story shifts gears. The dwarfs, exiled by the Queen, rescue her from tree-creature ambushes. Their campfire banter swings from goofy quips to sudden violence, so you never quite know if you’re watching a comedy sketch or a bloodbath. Midway scenes balance suspenseful stalking and slapstick relief—an uneasy rhythm that mirrors the film’s split personality.
In the final act, the band storms the castle for a climactic brawl. Snow confronts the Queen in a throne room painted scarlet, apple in hand. A series of quick cuts alternates frantic swordplay, mirror-borne soothsayers, and tortured screams. The verdict on pacing will depend on whether you find the break-neck editing exhilarating or dizzying, but the film never lingers long enough to let tension sag or jokes overstay their welcome.
Crafting Carnage: Style & Technique
Cinematographer Kody Newton frames a world that’s both story-book and do-it-yourself. Wide shots lay out mossy woods and crumbling ramparts, then snap into tight close-ups of dripping blood. Costumes feel lovingly ragged, with torn velvets and scarlet-stained silks that lean into their own theatricality. I’m reminded of guerrilla sets at local Renaissance fairs—there’s charm in every crooked stone and wobbly castle wall.
Brooks’s background in special effects shows in the unflinching gore. Limbs are severed with a satisfying squelch, and a river of blood spills across the courtyard in full-on splatter-house style. Naomi Mechem-Miller’s makeup team transforms Chelsea Edmundson’s Queen into a beauty sustained by horror—her flesh stretches unnaturally, her mirror spirits emerge nude and scornful.
Editing choices keep momentum high: dialogue scenes rarely exceed a minute before snapping back to action. That tempo can undercut dramatic beats, but it fuels a relentless energy that recalls 1980s grindhouse flicks. Sound designer work is equally bold—every axe swing and shriek is punchy, while Andrew Scott Bell’s Celtic-tinged score weaves between playful flute motifs and ominous drums. That musical duality underscores the film’s split personality, anchoring its fan-film roots in surprisingly polished audio craftsmanship.
Heroes, Villains, and a Touch of Camp
Sanae Loutsis’s Snow White balances wide-eyed warmth with fierce resolve. I found myself rooting for her even amid the chaos, recalling childhood wonder at Disney’s animation before stumbling onto this riot of red. Her chemistry with Tristan Nokes’s Prince is lighthearted—shades of a meet-cute lifted straight from teen comedies—so the film surprises when it pivots back to blood magic.
Chelsea Edmundson seizes every ounce of scenery. Her Queen delivers monologues dripping with venom as she soaks in virgin blood. It’s the kind of performance that makes you laugh and shudder at once. Jason Brooks as the huntsman brings muscle and menace, while Eric Pope’s “Tiny” lends unexpected warmth as a giant dwarf. The choice to cast actors with dwarfism (alongside a few average-sized performers) gives the ensemble an authentic feel.
Comic relief appears in the form of two bumbling sidekicks whose pop-culture quips land unevenly, yet they remind us this world doesn’t take itself too seriously. Moments of genuine tenderness—Snow gifting a toy to a peasant child—shine through the gore. That tension between sincerity and spectacle gives the film its quirky personality, inviting us to revel in its blood-soaked fairy tale while still caring about its characters.
The Death of Snow White premiered in Los Angeles on March 21, 2025, and was released in the United States on May 2, 2025.
Full Credits
Director: Jason Brooks
Writers: Jason Brooks, Naomi Mechem-Miller
Producers: Jason Brooks, Naomi Mechem-Miller, Charles L. Bunce, Kayli Fortun, Sharif Ibrahim, Kyrie Jackson, Eric Michael Kochmer, Jordan Logan, Randy Brians, Kody Newton
Executive Producer: Shawn Loutsis
Cast: Sanae Loutsis (Snow White), Chelsea Edmundson (Evil Queen), Tristan Nokes (The Prince), Meredith Binder (Evil Witch), Risa Mei (Pollen), Jeremy Hallam (Dozer), Ali Chapman (Arsta), Colin Miller (Beau), Dillon Moore (Sunny), Michael DeSanto II (Grimwald), Eric Pope (Tiny), Kelly Tappan (The Queen), Tyler McKenna (The King), Jason Brooks (Huntsman Gunnar), Milo Mechem-Miller (Wilhelm), Christopher Burnside (Jacob), Hailey Stubblefield (Inga), Lydia Pearl Pentz (Sophia), Holland Stull (Yvonne), Jonathan Holbrook (Huntsman Kaiser), Carl Covington (Huntsman Beckett), Charles Lawson (Huntsman MacQuoid), Thomas Marshall (Huntsman Wallace), Jason Reynolds (Huntsman Merek)
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Kody Newton
Editor: Jason Brooks
Composer: Andrew Scott Bell
The Review
The Death of Snow White
Verdict: The Death of Snow White is a riotous, blood-soaked fairy-tale experiment that wears its DIY roots with pride. Its uneven blend of tongue-in-cheek humor and visceral gore will delight genre fans, even if technical rough edges keep it from fully transcending its fan-film origins. It’s a bold, unpolished curiosity best enjoyed as a late-night adrenaline rush rather than a polished epic.
PROS
- Bold practical gore effects that deliver visceral thrills
- Committed lead and villain performances with memorable energy
- DIY production design that gives the film a scrappy charm
- Celtic-tinged score and sound design that elevate key moments
CONS
- Tonal shifts between horror and camp can feel jarring
- Occasional amateurish visuals undercut immersion
- Rapid-fire editing sometimes sacrifices emotional beats
- Comic relief bits land unevenly