HANSEL & GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS 3D (15, 88 mins)** Starring Jeremy Renner, Gemma Arterton, Famke Janssen, Thomas Mann, Pihla Viitala, Peter Stormare and the voice of Robin Atkin Downes. Director: Tommy Wirkola

Director Tommy Wirkola puts a bloodthirsty new spin on the classic fairytale in this gleefully violent fantasy.

Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters does exactly what it says in the snappy title – expands the story of two children held hostage by a crone in a gingerbread house into a full-blooded battle between the forces of good and evil.

The script marries action movie convention with an olde-worlde setting, providing the titular heroes with an arsenal of pithy one-liners as they despatch the enemy.

Hansel (Renner) and his feisty sister Gretel (Arterton) had their first encounter with witches as children when they stumbled into a house made of delicious candy.

Through luck and enterprise, the siblings flung the diabolical crone into her oven, establishing their reputation throughout the land as protectors against the dark arts.

Hansel and Gretel grow up with a hatred for these shape-shifting creatures and devote every waking minute to hunting down witches with their ingenious homemade weapons.

When several children from one sleepy village go missing, Sheriff Berringer (Stormare) blames local woman Mina (Viitala) and prepares to burn her as a witch.

The eponymous heroes intervene in the nick of time.

Gretel frees Mina, who takes an immediate shine to smitten Hansel.

The siblings set about tracking down powerful grand witch Muriel (Janssen), who is kidnapping the children as a sacrifice during the forthcoming night of the Blood Moon.

The witches are aided by a hulking ogre called Edward (voiced by Atkin Downes), who carries off children into the night.

With the odds stacked against them, Hansel, Gretel and an enthusiastic protege (Mann) lay their lives on the line to save the children and send Muriel and her coven back to hell.

With lashings of gore and potty-mouthed humour, Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is no slavish retread of the Brothers Grimm.

Wirkola splatters one crone’s guts all over the camera lens and another set-piece reduces a swarm of the villainesses to chunks of airborne flesh and entrails.

Renner and Arterton dispatch their prey with the occasional well-timed aside, both enjoying the physical aspects of their roles.

However, frenetic action sequences cannot compensate for flimsy plotting and a paucity of character development.