For the most part, actress
Mia Farrow avoided the thriller genre after starring in Rosemary’s Baby (1968), perhaps because she knew no subsequent
shocker was likely to reach the heights of that Roman Polanski-directed classic.
And sure enough, when one examines the two outright horror flicks Farrow made
during the ’70s, Rosemary’s Baby only
grows in stature by comparison. The latter of the two pictures, The Haunting of Julia (1977), is an
atmospheric but tedious psychodrama about a woman tormented by the experience
of losing a child. The earlier of the two pictures, See No Evil, is a trite riff on Wait
Until Dark, the 1966 play and 1967 movie about a blind woman terrorized by
a murderous assailant. Yet while Wait
Until Dark has a solid story and thrilling jolts, See No Evil spends 89 repetitive minutes mindlessly exploiting the
gimmick of a victim unable to sense nearby danger. And because Farrow’s
performance is mediocre—her melodramatic gestures and over-the-top whimpering
exacerbate the shortcomings of an underwritten role—the only strength of the
picture is the imaginative cinematography by ace British DP Gerry Fisher. Fisher’s
camera rides along the floors of spaces to spotlight objects lying in Farrow’s
path, and peers around corners to peek at things Farrow can merely detect by
sound; these flourishes lend a small measure of dynamism. As for the story, Farrow
plays Sarah, a young woman living in the English countryside with her aunt and
uncle. Sarah recently lost her sight in a horse-riding accident, so while she
seems psychologically adjusted to her change of life, she’s still physically
awkward. Therefore, when a killer slaughters Sarah’s relatives while she’s
away, it takes our heroine a while to notice the bodies. And then, of course,
the killer returns to reclaim a bracelet he lost during his crime spree—cue
scenes of Sarah trying to escape the house undetected, et cetera. See No Evil takes forever to get started,
and the plot is painfully predictable. Nonetheless, Fisher (and director
Richard Fleischer) pump as much life as they can into silly scenes of Farrow
cowering and fleeing and lurking—although it should be noted, with the proper degree of scorn, that the storyline relies on ugly stereotypes of gypsies as roving bands of criminals.
See No Evil: FUNKY
I tried and tried to get through this one but to no avail - how much could I take of Mia stumbling through the house?
ReplyDeleteHAUNTING OF JULIA is somewhat better, more effective, although it's plagued by the same opaqueness as the original Peter Straub novel.