Stories Television Reeltime The White Witch of Devil's End Episode: 1 2 3 4 5 6 The Poppet 1 image Overview Characters How to Watch Reviews 2 Statistics Quotes Overview First aired Monday, November 13, 2017 Written by Jan Edwards Directed by Keith Barnfather Runtime 15 minutes Location (Potential Spoilers!) Devil's End Watch Watched Favourite Favourited Add Review Edit Review Log a repeat Skip Skipped Unowned Owned Owned Save to my list Saved Edit date completed Custom Date Release Date Archive (no date) Save Characters Olive Hawthorne Melissa Fenn Winstanley Show All Characters (3) How to watch The Poppet: DVD The Daemons Of Devil’s End Reviews Add Review Edit Review Sort: Date (Newest First) Date (Oldest First) Likes (High-Low) Likes (Low-High) Rating (High-Low) Rating (Low-High) Word count (High-Low) Word count (Low-High) Username (A-Z) Username (Z-A) Spoilers First Spoilers Last 2 reviews 1 January 2025 · 50 words Review by uss-genderprise The first three had a general trend of improvement, but we're back to "meh". The story wasn't too bad and the shorter runtime helped quite a bit. I appreciate the comment on Voodoo dolls. In general the witchy lore has been handled very well in all but the first episode. uss-genderprise View profile Like Liked 0 1 January 2025 · 180 words Review by JayPea Spoilers 1 This review contains spoilers! Eh, another just sort of fine story. I do like how this series is taking a look at various different forms of witchcraft and sort of blending it all together, Familiars (which has some nice small continuity here), Fey, Vampires, and now poppets. The idea of the person creating the poppets being a hairdresser is a nice little touch which makes her influence over all of the town a lot more believable, it's a small touch, but it's fun. The effects here aren't great, they haven't been for most of this series, but there's one moment with a pulsating poppet here that worked surprisingly well for me. And lastly, the ending also works pretty nicely, the solution being replacing the hair that's in the poppet makes sense and is something that both feels smart to be figured out, but also something that the audience could figure out themselves in that situation. And then Hawthorne ending the story, the emotions come across pretty well, and the last shot of the poppet in the fireplace gives a very satisfying sense of closure. JayPea View profile Like Liked 1 Open in new window Statistics More Ratings Needed! 4 ratings Member Statistics Watched 8 Favourited 0 Reviewed 2 Saved 1 Skipped 4 Owned 1 Quotes Add Quote Submit a Quote