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Wind (The) AKA Edge of Terror (Blu-ray)
Blu-ray ALL - United Kingdom - Arrow Films Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (7th May 2020). |
The Film
![]() ![]() Synopsis: Thriller writer Sian Anderson (Meg Foster) leaves Los Angeles, where she dallies with her lover John (David McCallum). Sian is preparing to leave for the medieval castle town of Monemvasia, Greece, in order to work on her next novel. Arriving in Monemvasia, Sian is greeted by her eccentric landlord Elias Appleby (Robert Morley), an Englishman who owns the house in which Sian is staying. Appleby warns Sian about the coming winds, and advises her to stay in the house. Monemvasia is strangely deserted, seemingly devoid of life. Settling in to her accommodation, Sian telephones John in Los Angeles whilst the winds outside pick up and darkness falls. However, the line goes dead. Shortly afterwards, Sian meets Phil (Wings Hauser), another American; Phil is a former mercenary who is working as a handyman in Monemvasia. Sian soon discovers that Appleby has been murdered, and that Phil is the culprit. Soon, Phil lays siege to the house in which Sian is staying, and unable to make contact with the outside world, Sian is forced to defend herself, until the local police send a visiting American sailor, Kesner (Steve Railsback), to check up on her. ![]() ![]() With this sequence, Mastorakis quickly essays his female lead as successful, independent and sexually confident. It doesn’t seem too much of a stretch of the imagination to see Sian as Mastorakis’ response to the character of novelist Joan Wilder (Kathleen Turner) in Robert Zemeckis’ Romancing the Stone (1984), and in some respects The Wind is perhaps best regarded as a subtly satirical riposte to that film. From here, it’s not a stretch to see Phil as The Wind’s answer to Romancing the Stone’s Jack Colton (Michael Douglas). This comes to the foreground later in The Wind, when Sian verbally spars with Phil, a sense of sexual threat bubbling beneath their encounters – possibly contributed to, at least in part, by Wings Hauser’s association, at that point in his career, with his memorable turn as the sadistic pimp Ramrod in Gary Sherman’s Vice Squad (1982). John, a settled and ‘normal’ middle-aged man, is juxtaposed in the narrative against the macho Phil – who, suggested by the dialogue to be a former mercenary and played by Hauser with gum-chewing swagger, seems like a character who has stepped from the pages of one of Sian’s novels. ‘I’m into mysteries, murder’, Sian tells Phil on their first meeting, whilst talking about her writing career. ‘So am I’, Phil responds with a smirk. ‘What’s your favourite weapon?’, Sian asks him. ‘M16s’, Phil replies, telling her he has been in Nicaragua and the Middle East. Where in Sian’s fiction (at least, from what we are led to believe about it through the onscreen dialogue) these macho characters are presented as idealised depictions of masculinity, the construct of Sian’s sexual fantasies, in The Wind the macho Phil is clearly unbalanced and a constant threat to Sian. In Romancing the Stone, Joan Wilder comes face to face with a man who embodies many of the qualities of the heroes of her romantic fiction and falls in love with him; in The Wind, Sian meets Phil, whose macho presence places him in diametric opposition to her lover John, and is almost murdered by him. ![]() Also in the film’s opening sequence, Sian and John talk briefly about the plotting of her novels, John commenting dryly that ‘you [Sian] think that unexpected endings are brilliant. I prefer normal short stories’. What’s ironic is that when The Wind moves past its expository sequences, its narrative features no enigma (the figure pursuing Sean is identified unambiguously as Phil pretty much from the moment the character is introduced onscreen) and no ‘twist’ in the tale. With the thinnest of plots, The Wind is almost entirely an exercise in style, the photography and sound design conjuring up an atmosphere of threat through swirling mists and the ominous, persistent sound of the titular wind. ![]() Like Phenomena, The Wind offers hints of the supernatural powers of the wind about which Appleby warns Sian. Is Phil’s violent behaviour triggered by its presence? (The simplicity of the film’s title underscores this focus on the wind, which was somewhat lost when the film was distributed on home video in the UK, by Polygram, under the alternate title The Edge of Terror.) In the same conversation about the wind, Appleby explicitly discusses the supernatural, asking Sian if she believes in ghosts. ‘Never seen one’, Sian replies succinctly. ‘Neither have I’, Appleby tells her, ‘but at times like this, I can feel them passing by. Ghosts, shadows, memories of the past’. Like Appleby’s assertion, the narrative of The Wind offers sometimes fleeting shadows of themes that are sometimes frustratingly underdeveloped, but nevertheless there’s a satisfying sense of inevitability to the story events, the film’s refusal to offer a ‘twist’ offering the kind of ‘simple story’ that John praises in his early discussion with Sian. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Video
Shot on 35mm and in colour, The Wind is presented uncut with a running time of 91:56 mins. (It must be stressed that this running time is accurate for the digital file presented to us for review; additional logos on the final, pressed Blu-ray version may result in a slightly longer running time.) Arrow’s presentation of the film is in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1. Whilst we were only able to view the film via a digital file and therefore cannot comment on the encode to disc, the 1080p image in the file presented to us for review was excellent. Detail was rich throughout the presentation, especially in close-ups of the actors (though there is some deliberately diffused light in close-ups of Foster). Much of the film takes place in low-light or limited light, and the presentation exhibits some excellent contrast levels, meaning that the scenes outside – with low-light scenes lit by swirling smoke machine-generated mist – are nicely balanced, with deep shadows and highlights that do not bloom too much. From a new restoration that is based on a new 4k scan of the negative, Arrow’s presentation of the film looks superb. ![]() ![]() ![]()
Audio
The Blu-ray release will, according to Arrow’s press materials, offer an option of a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track and a LPCM 2.0 stereo track, with optional English HoH subtitles being provided alongside optional Greek subtitles. In the digital file provided for review, audio was excellent throughout, dialogue being audible and a good sense of range being exhibited throughout.
Extras
According to Arrow’s press release, the Blu-ray release will include the following extra features: - ‘Blowing the Wind’: an interview with Mastorakis - ‘The Sound of the Wind’: the soundtrack (composed by Hans Zimmer & Stanley Myers) - A compilation of trailers for Mastorakis’ films
Overall
![]() References: Didion, Joan, 1968: Slouching Towards Bethlehem. London: 4th Estate
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