Snow White is the Princess of Tabor, daughter of King Magnus and Queen Eleanor. After his wife's death, King Magnus marries the beautiful Ravenna after rescuing her from the Dark Army, an invading force of glass soldiers. Ravenna, who is in fact a powerful sorceress and the Dark Army's master, kills Magnus on their wedding night after noting that men like him exploit the beauty of women and discard them. As Ravenna usurps control of the entire kingdom, Duke Hammond escapes the castle with his son William, but is unable to rescue Snow White, who is captured by Ravenna's brother Finn. Snow White is then locked away in the north tower of the castle.
Tabor is left in ruins under Ravenna's rule as she periodically drains the youth from young women in order to maintain a spell once cast by her mother which allows her to keep her beauty. When Snow White comes of age, Ravenna learns from her Magic Mirror that Snow White is destined to destroy her unless Ravenna consumes the young girl's heart, which will make her immortal. Ravenna orders Finn to bring her Snow White, but she escapes into the Dark Forest, where Ravenna has no power. Eric the Huntsman, a widower who has survived the Dark Forest, is brought to Ravenna, who orders him to lead Finn in pursuit of Snow White. In exchange, she promises to revive his deceased wife, Sarah. Duke Hammond learns that Snow White is alive and has fled into the Dark Forest. William, Snow White's childhood friend, later infiltrates Finn's band as a bowman to find her.
The Huntsman tracks down Snow White in the Dark Forest but refuses to hand her over until he knows Ravenna will keep her word. When Finn admits that Ravenna cannot resurrect the dead, the Huntsman helps Snow White to escape, promising to escort her to Duke Hammond's castle in exchange for a reward of gold. The two leave the Dark Forest, escape the troll and pass through a fishing village where all the women have disfigured themselves in order to escape Ravenna, and where he learns Snow White's true identity. He then leaves her in the care of the women but returns when he sees the village being burned down by Finn's men. Snow White and the Huntsman eventually meet a band of dwarves — Beith, Muir, Quert, Coll, Duir, Gort, Nion, and Gus. Muir discovers that Snow White is the only person who can defeat Ravenna and end her reign.
As they travel through a fairy sanctuary, the group is attacked by Finn's men, resulting in Gus' death. The Huntsman kills Finn after learning he abetted in the murder of his wife. William reveals himself and helps defeat the soldiers before joining the others in their journey to Hammond's castle.
Ravenna disguises herself as William and tempts Snow White into eating a poisoned apple, but is forced to flee when the Huntsman and William discover her. William kisses Snow White — whom he believes to be dead — without seeing that she has shed a solitary tear. She is taken to Hammond's castle. As she lies in repose, the Huntsman professes his regret for not saving Snow White, who reminds him of his wife, and kisses her, breaking the spell; she awakens after a second tear has fallen. Snow White then takes command of the Duke's army and leads them into battle against Ravenna.
The Dwarves infiltrate Tabor through the sewers and open the gates, which allows the Duke's army to invade the castle. Snow White confronts Ravenna, but is overpowered. Ravenna is about to kill Snow White and consume her heart when she uses one of the moves Eric taught her on Ravenna and successfully kills her in the end, telling her that she cannot have her heart. Duke Hammond's army is victorious.
The kingdom is once again in order and peace as Snow White becomes Queen and in the end, Snow White and Eric share meaningful glances, indicating a possible romantic end for Snow White and the Huntsman Eric.
Cast
Production
| Director: | Rupert Sanders |
| Producer: | Joe Roth (producer) |
| Sarah Bradshaw (co-producer) | |
| Sam Mercer (producer) | |
| Palak Patel (producer) | |
| Laurie Boccaccio (associate producer) | |
| Gloria S. Borders (executive producer) | |
| Helen Hayden (producer: Ireland surf unit) | |
| Writer: | Evan Daugherty (screen story) |
| Hossein Amini (screenplay) | |
| John Lee Hancock (screenplay) and) |
Reviews for Snow White & the Huntsman
Advocate (Baton Rouge, LA)
Astonishingly beautiful and breathtaking in its brutal imagery, “Snow White & the Huntsman” is thrilling and frightening in equal measure, yet as bereft of satisfying substance as a poisoned apple.
Read review27 Jul 2012
Aisle Seat
My fear going into Snow White & the Huntsman was that it would represent the Twilight-ing of a classic fairy tale, kind of like last year's Red Riding Hood. I have nothing against making movies for a primarily tween-girl audience, but some of them are...
Sacramento News & Review
For the second time this year, we get a revision of the Brothers Grimm tale of the conflict between Snow White (Kristen Stewart, dull and lifeless as ever) and her wicked stepmother (Charlize Theron, snarling up a storm).
Read review7 Jun 2012
Eric D. Snider
The first Snow White adaptation of 2012, "Mirror Mirror," took the sunny, kid-friendly route – and thus couldn’t be more different from the second one, “Snow White and the Huntsman,” which is serious and grown-up. And why shouldn’t it be? We’ve seen...
Movie Web
Last time I checked, the Grimm Brothers were not creating literary works with the influence of The Lord of the Ring series. In the end, this is all this film will be known for, as a wannabe Lord of the Ring. Charlize and the Dwarfs were the saving...
Read review9 Jul 2012
External Links
Articles
Universal have seemingly clarified their plans for the upcoming sequel to Snow White & The Huntsman, with THR reporting that the studio will focus on the character of the Huntsman second time out.
George Wales(totalfilm.com) - 2012-08-15
Reviews for Snow White & the Huntsman
Advocate (Baton Rouge, LA)
Astonishingly beautiful and breathtaking in its brutal imagery, “Snow White & the Huntsman” is thrilling and frightening in equal measure, yet as bereft of satisfying substance as a poisoned apple.
Read review27 Jul 2012
Aisle Seat
My fear going into Snow White & the Huntsman was that it would represent the Twilight-ing of a classic fairy tale, kind of like last year's Red Riding Hood. I have nothing against making movies for a primarily tween-girl audience, but some of them are...
Sacramento News & Review
For the second time this year, we get a revision of the Brothers Grimm tale of the conflict between Snow White (Kristen Stewart, dull and lifeless as ever) and her wicked stepmother (Charlize Theron, snarling up a storm).
Read review7 Jun 2012
Eric D. Snider
The first Snow White adaptation of 2012, "Mirror Mirror," took the sunny, kid-friendly route – and thus couldn’t be more different from the second one, “Snow White and the Huntsman,” which is serious and grown-up. And why shouldn’t it be? We’ve seen...
Movie Web
Last time I checked, the Grimm Brothers were not creating literary works with the influence of The Lord of the Ring series. In the end, this is all this film will be known for, as a wannabe Lord of the Ring. Charlize and the Dwarfs were the saving...
Read review9 Jul 2012
Boxoffice Magazine
The recent resurgence of "revisionist" fairy tales means that audiences have been gifted not one, but two new takes on the Snow White tale in 11 weeks. In his feature debut, commerical director Rupert Sanders shows off his unquestionable flair and eye...
Read review31 May 2012
New York Post
This year’s second revisionist take on the Brothers Grimm classic, “Snow White and the Huntsman’’ is a visual treat with some expertly staged (if bloodlessly PG-13) battle scenes.
Read review31 May 2012
RedEye
To those who mock the casting of ever-gloomy Kristen Stewart (“Twilight”) as the brothers Grimm’s ultra-pure Snow White: Why shouldn’t she brood? The heroine's spent the better part of her teens locked in an isolated tower, with nothing to do but stare...
Read review31 May 2012
Miami Herald
Snow White and the Huntsman is the second movie this year based on the fairy tale of a young princess and her monstrous stepmother. But where Mirror Mirror opted for froth and camp and tra-la-la, this one puts the Grimm back into the story. Ravenna...
Read review31 May 2012
MediaMikes
Some fairy tales are best left alone. In doing some quick research I learned that there are no less than thirty filmed versions of the tale of Snow White. And I’m willing to bet that all of them (well, maybe not the X-rated version entitled...
Read review1 Jun 2012
Movies.com
Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who eats raw bird hearts and takes baths in Elmer's Glue and hollers like Faye Dunaway in Mommie Dearest and black-widow sexes guys to death and sucks the virgin breath out of teen models and aspires to Kristen Stewart...
St. Petersburg Times
Kristen Stewart should watch her mouth. She isn't talking trash or dirty, but slack-jawed is no way for a fairy-tale warrior to look. Not that there's much action in Snow White and the Huntsman anyway.
Read review1 Jun 2012
MovieCrypt.com
After an evil sorceress named Ravenna (Charlize Theron) tricks her way into a kingdom’s throne, she locks up the former king’s daughter, Snow White (Kristen Stewart), into a tower for safe keeping. Advised by her magic mirror, Snow White is Ravenna’s...
Read review2 Jun 2012
Screen Jabber
Snow White and the Huntsman is the newest installment from Hollywood's recent love for adapting fairytales with a new twist. We've had recent movies such as Red Riding Hood and Mirror Mirror grace the silver screen, plus we've got even more heading our...
Washington Post
“Snow White and the Huntsman” has everything you remember from the classic fairy tale, plus a heck of a lot you don’t.
Read review1 Jun 2012
Climbing Higher Pictures
There’s something rotten in Denmark… or wherever the hell it is this story is supposed to take place geographically. What may come as a surprise to many of you, is that the decaying fruit of Snow White and the Huntsman, is not, as many postulated ahead...
Read review30 May 2012
iHaveNet.com
Better and more darkly imaginative than its headache of a coming-attractions trailer suggests, "Snow White and the Huntsman" follows another Snow White re-do, "Mirror Mirror," into theaters by two months and two days.
7M Pictures
Earlier this spring, when there were two Snow White adaptations to look forward to, I was rolling my eyes at “Mirror Mirror” and rubbing my hands with anticipation for “Snow White and the Huntsman.” As it turns out, now that I’ve seen both movies...
The A.V. Club
The greatest innovation Snow White And The Huntsman brings to its “dark retelling” of the Snow White fairy tale is suggesting that its evil-queen antagonist (played by Charlize Theron) has a name, a past, and a purpose.
Read review31 May 2012
Fan The Fire
Kristen Stewart is miscast in Rupert Sanders’ good looking but shallow reimagining of the classic Snow White fairy-tale. Stewart plays the title character with open-mouthed sincerity, but doesn’t actually have that much to do, or even many lines of...
Read review25 Sep 2012
Fresno Bee
Once upon a time, in a strange and mysterious place called Hollywood, a group of energetic producers became fascinated with children's fairy tales. They huffed and puffed and blew up the millions of dollars in cash needed to turn these children's...
Read review31 May 2012
FirstShowing.net
Getting back to the darker roots of fairy tales is one of the many things Snow White and the Huntsman does right. The dark characters in muddy sets and strange creatures lurking in shadows are all on display, much of them effectively executed with...
Read review1 Jun 2012
CLIPS
Escaping from her evil stepmother Queen Ravenna (Charlize Theron), Snow White (Kristen Stewart) hides out in the enchanted Dark Forest. The Queen sends a huntsman (Chris Hemsworth) to kill "the fairest one of all", but instead he protects her and...
Houston Press
There's not much new under the sun in Snow White and the Huntsman, which is to be expected when your source material is a 19th century fairy tale that's been adapted half a hundred times already. You know the story, you know the characters, you know...
Read review1 Jul 2012
filmjabber
Snow White and the Huntsman is like the bitchy girl in high school. She's attractive, sexy and stylish, but cold and hollow underneath. She may be worth a ride or two around the block, but she's never going to meet the parents.
Reel Film Reviews
The second film this year to be adapted from the infamous Brothers Grimm fable (after Mirror Mirror), Snow White and the Huntsman follows Kristen Stewart's Snow White as she escapes from the clutches of her evil stepmother (Charlize Theron's Ravenna)...
Read review31 May 2012
Reel Views
Let's start out by not dwelling overmuch on the existence of Mirror Mirror. The basic story outline may be the same, but the similarities end there. Everything of importance is different: tone, intent, plot specifics, and so forth.
Read review1 Jun 2012
CinemaDope
Universal puts the grim back into Brothers Grimm with its epic reimagining of the Snow White fable. This time, in “Snow White and the Huntsman,” instead of a chirpy adolescent and snaggletoothed witch we get a warrior princess and sexy, power-mad vampira.
Entertainment Weekly
Snow White and the Huntsman makes room for some of these stirrings within its heavy-handed ''revisionist'' take. The best thing in the movie by far is Charlize Theron's performance as the scheming, snarling Queen Ravenna, who is under an empowering...
Read review2 Jun 2012
Slant Magazine
Rupert Sanders's Snow White and the Hunstman updates a day in the life of Sharon Stone the fairest fairy tale of them all with more-grim-than-Grimm conviction. Much detail is lavished on the medieval setting, a mud-and-shit-everywhere nightmare that...
Read review30 May 2012
Atlantic City Weekly
Even before a character declares that Snow White is “The One” — that is, the only person with a chance to defeat the evil queen and restore harmony in the kingdom — there was a Matrix/Keanu Reeves vibe to the central performance of Kristen Stewart in...
Read review6 Jun 2012
CinemaBlend.com
In Snow White and the Huntsman, a series of characters insist over and over again that the titular princess is "very special" or "the one" or "the only one who can save us;" it's a classic instance of telling instead of showing that reveals a lot about...
Hindustan Times
A lavishly mounted saga which effortlessly blends style with substance, Snow White and the Huntsman will likely appeal to multiplex goers as well as the cognoscente.
Read review2 Jun 2012
The Sydney Morning Herald
It's all very different from Julia Roberts's turn in Mirror Mirror this year. Roberts's queen was the fairytale equivalent of a Beverly Hills princess suffering the usual phobias provoked by the ravages of age, and it was lit by cheering touches of...
Read review21 Jun 2012
View London
Despite its stunning visual effects work, Snow White and the Huntsman is something of a disappointment and would happily sit alongside the recent version of Red Riding Hood in a double bill of underwhelming fairytale movies.
Read review31 May 2012
Time Out London
Every few years, some bright spark at a Hollywood studio thinks of revisiting the classic fairytales, giving them a modern twist and making them ‘relevant’. The results are rarely pretty – anyone recall ‘Snow White: A Tale of Terror’?...
TotalFilm.com
Naturally, it begins with “once upon a time”. And yes, along the way there’s romance, a poisoned apple, a stimulating smooch and a queen with a heart as black as coal.
Read review28 May 2012
MovieXclusive.com
Never in our farthest imaginings did we envision Snow White to be an ass-kicking warrior princess who would lead an entire army into battle, but that’s the reason why first-time feature film director Rupert Sanders’ interpretation of one of the...
Rediff.com
I can still recall how the syrupy texture of Adriana Caselotti's fanciful aspirations, surrounded by seven attentive dwarves, filled up the cheerful frames of the Disney classic, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Snow White's romantic impulses are so...
Read review1 Jun 2012
Birmingham Mail
AFTER Marvel Avengers Assemble, here comes the year’s second big pre-summer blockbuster.Once again it stars beefy Chris Hemsworth – this time as The Huntsman instead of Thor – but don’t expect him to deserve a medal.
Read review1 Jun 2012
ABC Radio (Australia)
Make no mistake: Snow White and the Huntsman is terrific filmmaking. It is visually stunning, with many sequences of staggering beauty. It has a satisfying, classically three-act structurem, surprisingly interesting characters, excellent music and...
Read review26 Jun 2012
Koimoi.com
A beautiful princess – as white as Snow, with lips as red as blood – has a step-mother who is after her life. Everyone knows the story of the damsel in distress, Snow White. After Mirror Mirror, the comical version of Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs...
Read review31 May 2012
QNetwork Entertainment
Snow White and the Huntsman, the latest cinematic incarnation of the medieval German fairy tale, hews close in tone to the version told by the Grimm Brothers in the early 19th century, but adds plenty of modern action and bluster to bring the story...
Shadows on the Wall
There's an oddly over-serious tone to this fairy tale, as if the filmmakers thought they were making a massive action epic on par with The Lord of the Rings. But the plot has all the complexity of, well, a bedtime story. And a little more camp attitude...
Read review18 May 2012
Express.co.uk
AFTER Mirror Mirror misfired at the box office here comes Hollywood’s second bash at turning Snow White into a blockbuster queen.Snow White And The Huntsman is a much more muscular affair as it turns the fairytale princess (Kristen Stewart) into...
Read review1 Jun 2012
Flicks.co.nz
Ticking both boxes, Rupert Sanders’ Brothers Grimm reboot features an extraordinary troupe of UK males (Hoskins, Winstone, McShane etc) – as the dwarves! And for an hour, it’s as much fun to watch as they are, bickering and boozing like old muckers.
Kc
เป็นเรื่องที่สองแล้วสำหรับการนำนิทาน Snow White กลับมาเล่าใหม่ในปี 2012 นี้ โดยใช้ชื่อ Snow White and the Huntsman ที่ออกมาแนวดาร์คแฟนตาซีกว่าฉบับก่อนหน้านี้มาก หนังนำเราไปอาณาจักรแห่งหนึ่งที่ราชินีแม่มดผู้ชั่วร้ายยึดอำนาจ เมื่ออำนาจของนางเริ่มอ่อนแอลง มี
Read review31 May 2012
Cast
![]() | Kristen Stewart | ... | Snow White |
![]() | Charlize Theron | ... | Ravenna |
![]() | Chris Hemsworth | ... | The Huntsman |
![]() | Sam Claflin | ... | William |
![]() | Ian McShane | ... | Beith |
![]() | Toby Jones | ... | Coll |
![]() | Ray Winstone | ... | Gort |
![]() | Bob Hoskins | ... | Muir |
![]() | Nick Frost | ... | Nion |
![]() | Eddie Marsan | ... | Duir |
![]() | Vincent Regan | ... | Duke Hammond |
![]() | Noah Huntley | ... | King Magnus |
![]() | Brian Gleeson | ... | Gus |
![]() | Sam Spruell | ... | Finn |
![]() | Johnny Harris | ... | Quert |
![]() | Lily Cole | ... | Greta |
![]() | Dave Legeno | ... | Broch |
![]() | Joey Ansah | ... | Aldan |
![]() | Jamie Blackley | ... | Iain |
![]() | Liberty Ross | ... | Queen Eleanor |
![]() | Izzy Meikle-Small | ... | Young Ravenna |
![]() | Rachael Stirling | ... | Anna |
![]() | Mark Wingett | ... | Thomas |
| Hattie Gotobed | ... | Lily | |
![]() | Christopher Obi | ... | Mirror Man |
| Craig Izzard | ... | Duke's Army | |
![]() | Raffey Cassidy | ... | Young Snow White |
![]() | Xavier Atkins | ... | Young William |
| Anastasia Hille | ... | Ravenna's Mother | |
| Elliot Reeve | ... | Young Finn | |
![]() | Matt Berry | ... | Percy |
| Greg Hicks | ... | Black Knight General | |
![]() | Peter Ferdinando | ... | Black Knight |
![]() | Andrew Hawley | ... | Guard on Duty |
![]() | Gregor Truter | ... | Duke's Commander |
| Tom Mullion | ... | Soldier | |
| Lee Bennett | ... | Dark Army Warrior | |
| Adams Cullen | ... | Gus Dwarf Double | |
| Lee Edward Jones | ... | Quert Dwarf Double | |
| Cameron Matthew Leese | ... | Nobleman | |
| Edwards Lewis | ... | Nion Dwarf Double | |
| Edd Osmond | ... | Gort Dwarf Double | |
![]() | Jo Osmond | ... | Beith Dwarf Double |
![]() | Neve Gachev | ... | Fendland woman |
![]() | Annabelle Wallis | ... | Sara (uncredited) |
| Craig Garner | ... | Dwarf (uncredited) | |
| Karen Anderson | ... | Dwarf (uncredited) | |
| Christian Wolf-La'Moy | ... | Ravenna's Archer (uncredited) | |
| Duncan JC Mais | ... | The Shadow (uncredited) | |
![]() | Duncan Casey | ... | Ravenna Guard (uncredited) |
![]() | Jess Liaudin | ... | Shadow Army Soldier (uncredited) |
| Jimmy Pethrus | ... | Dark & Duke's Army Soldier (uncredited) | |
| David Verne | ... | Shadow Soldier (uncredited) | |
![]() | Matt Hookings | ... | Magnus Guard (uncredited) |
| Kevin Hudson | ... | Archer (uncredited) | |
![]() | Darren Kent | ... | Emaciated Peasant (uncredited) |
| Brendan McCoy | ... | Warrior - Duke's Army (uncredited) | |
| Duncan Meadows | ... | Woodsman (uncredited) | |
![]() | Julian Seager | ... | Woodsman (uncredited) |
| Ryan Stuart | ... | Mercenary #3 (uncredited) | |
| Max Manganello | ... | Duke's Warrior (uncredited) | |
| Sarah Molkenthin | ... | Peasant (uncredited) | |
| Lasco Atkins | ... | Palace Worker (uncredited) | |
| Alex Moore | ... | Duke's Knight (uncredited) | |
| Bryony Neylan-Francis | ... | Gypsy Villager (uncredited) | |
| Mayo Oliver | ... | Ravenna Guard (uncredited) | |
| Paradox Pollack | ... | Bat Faerie (uncredited) | |
| David Speed | ... | Ravenna Guard (uncredited) | |
| Jake Francis | ... | Ravenna's Archer (uncredited) | |
| Paul Warren | ... | Emaciated Peasant (uncredited) |
Production
| Director: | Rupert Sanders |
| Producer: | Joe Roth (producer) |
| Sarah Bradshaw (co-producer) | |
| Sam Mercer (producer) | |
| Palak Patel (producer) | |
| Laurie Boccaccio (associate producer) | |
| Gloria S. Borders (executive producer) | |
| Helen Hayden (producer: Ireland surf unit) | |
| Writer: | Evan Daugherty (screen story) |
| Hossein Amini (screenplay) | |
| John Lee Hancock (screenplay) and) | |
| Composer: | James Newton Howard |
| Cinematographer: | Greig Fraser |
| Editing: | Conrad Buff IV |
| Neil Smith | |
| Casting: | Lucy Bevan |
| Production Design: | Dominic Watkins |
| Art Director: | Andrew Ackland-Snow |
| Alastair Bullock | |
| Oliver Goodier | |
| Stuart Rose | |
| John Frankish | |
| David Warren (supervising art director) | |
| Set Decorator: | Fainche MacCarthy |
| Costume Design: | Colleen Atwood |
| Makeup: | Bonnie Clevering (hair stylist: Ms. Stewart) |
| Richard Glass (contact lens optician) | |
| Chloe Grice (hair trainee) | |
| Catriona Johnstone (crowd hairdresser) | |
| Sebastian Lochmann (prosthetic makeup sculptor) | |
| Jane Oginsky (assistant makeup artist) | |
| Stacey Panepinto (makeup artist: Ms. Stewart) | |
| Katie Pattenden (assistant hair stylist) | |
| Jemma Scott-Knox-Gore (contact lens coordinator) | |
| Stephanie Lynne Smith (daily makeup) | |
| Luca Vannella (hair department head) | |
| Josh Weston (special makeup effects artist) | |
| David White (prosthetics makeup designer) | |
| Nicola Buck (makeup supervisor: second unit) | |
| Helen Conroy (junior makeup artist: dailies) | |
| Marcelle Genovese (hair crowd supervisor) | |
| Jennifer Harty (makeup daily) | |
| Colin Jackman (sculptor) | |
| Soleil Jackson (crowd makeup junior: dailies) | |
| Uxue Laguardia (makeup artist) | |
| Katie Lee (hair stylist: dailies) | |
| Monica MacDonald (makeup artist) | |
| Nuria Mbomio (crowd makeup supervisor) | |
| Niamh O'Loan (makeup artist) | |
| Susie O'Sullivan (prosthetic makeup artist) | |
| Colin Shulver (special makeup effects artist) | |
| Sophie Slotover (make up artist: daily) | |
| Mandy Gold (crowd makeup artist) | |
| Wakana Yoshihara (hair stylist: crowd) | |
| Natalie Abizadeh (make-up trainee: Crowd) | |
| Amy Byrne (makeup artist) | |
| Tilly Calder (makeup junior) | |
| Tamsin Dorling (daily makeup artist) | |
| Nikkie Grimshaw (prosthetic painter) | |
| Joe Hopker (hair supervisor: second unit) | |
| Giuliano Mariano (hair stylist) | |
| Sharon Martin (makeup department head) | |
| Donald McInnes (crowd makeup artist) | |
| Alice Moore (makeup trainee) | |
| Nina Pratley (crowd makeup junior: dailies) | |
| Tracy Smith (hair stylist) | |
| Pippa Woods (crowd hair: dailies) | |
| Francesco Alberico (hair stylist) | |
| Jessica Brooks (crowd makeup artist) | |
| Lauren Katie Cox (hair trainee) | |
| Sarah Downes (makeup artist: crowd) | |
| Patt Foad (crowd hair junior: dailies (uncredited) | |
| Tammy Harewood (daily makeup artist) | |
| John Kavanagh (prosthetics assistant) | |
| Lois McIntosh (makeup daily) | |
| Stuart Richards (special makeup effects artist) | |
| Luca Saccuman (hair stylist) | |
| Laura Schiavo (hair stylist) | |
| Brigitta Smart (crowd makeup artist) | |
| Rachael Speke (hair dailies) | |
| Sarah Walkinshaw (makeup artist) | |
| Julie White (prosthetic makeup artist) | |
| Julia Wilson (makeup artist assistant) | |
| Roz Abery (prosthetic makeup artist) | |
| Victoria Bancroft (prosthetic makeup artist) | |
| Alex Rouse (wigmaker) | |
| Kate Alexandra Smith (prosthetics mould maker) | |
| Sacha Carter (prosthetics production manager) | |
| Pascale Recher (junior makeup artist: dailies) | |
| Kate Laura Woodhead (silicone technician) | |
| Production Management: | Sarah Bradshaw (unit production manager) |
| Tricia Miles (post-production supervisor) | |
| Simone Goodridge (production supervisor) | |
| Sam Haveland (assistant unit manager) | |
| Michael J. Malone (unit production manager: additional photography) | |
| Gerald Scaife (second unit production supervisor) | |
| Lauren Scott (post-production supervisor) |
Companies
| Production Studio: | FilmEngine |
| Roth Films | |
| Universal Pictures |
| United States | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Hong Kong | 31 May 2012 | |
| Singapore | 31 May 2012 | |
| Spain | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Netherlands | 7 Jun 2012 | |
| Norway | 8 Jun 2012 | |
| Germany | 31 May 2012 | |
| Hungary | 31 May 2012 | |
| Portugal | 31 May 2012 | |
| Brazil | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Canada | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Lithuania | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Denmark | 7 Jun 2012 | |
| Australia | 21 Jun 2012 | |
| Thailand | 31 May 2012 | |
| Egypt | 30 May 2012 | |
| Argentina | 31 May 2012 | |
| Chile | 31 May 2012 | |
| Croatia | 31 May 2012 | |
| Greece | 31 May 2012 | |
| Lebanon | 31 May 2012 | |
| Malaysia | 31 May 2012 | |
| Peru | 31 May 2012 | |
| Slovakia | 31 May 2012 | |
| Slovenia | 31 May 2012 | |
| Korea, Republic of | 31 May 2012 | |
| United Arab Emirates | 31 May 2012 | |
| Austria | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Colombia | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Cyprus | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Estonia | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Indonesia | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Mexico | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Panama | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Paraguay | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Philippines | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Poland | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Romania | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| South Africa | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Turkey | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Venezuela | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Vietnam | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Ukraine | 7 Jun 2012 | |
| Finland | 8 Jun 2012 | |
| Sweden | 8 Jun 2012 | |
| Belgium | 13 Jun 2012 | |
| France | 11 Jun 2012 | |
| Russian Federation | 27 Sep 2012 | |
| Japan | 15 Jun 2012 | |
| New Caledonia | 21 Jun 2012 | |
| New Zealand | 21 Jun 2012 | |
| Italy | 11 Jul 2012 | |
| Iceland | 30 May 2012 | |
| Ireland | 30 May 2012 | |
| United Kingdom | 30 May 2012 | |
| Czech Republic | 31 May 2012 | |
| Kuwait | 31 May 2012 | |
| Serbia | 31 May 2012 | |
| Switzerland | 13 Jun 2012 | |
| Bahrain | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| India | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Pakistan | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Taiwan | 1 Jun 2012 | |
| Cambodia | 7 Jun 2012 | |
| Georgia | 12 Jul 2012 | |
| Israel | 26 Jul 2012 |






















































































