Although
nobody would ever describe the Canadian sports drama Second
Wind as required viewing, it’s the sort of amiably predictable story that
unfurls like the cinematic equivalent of comfort food. Moreover, watching Second Wind recalls a time when small
movies about the everyday lives of ordinary people were made regularly, even if
those pictures sometimes emerged from the fringes of the industry, as is true
of Second Wind. Today,
character-study features generally trend toward dark examinations of monsters
and one-dimensional celebrations of saints.
Anyway, Second Wind concerns Roger (James Naughton), a 30-year-old
stockbroker for whom everything has come easily. One day, he sees a TV report
about a 26-year-old running champion and listens intently to remarks from that
athlete’s coach. Inspired, Roger begins jogging, soon discovering he’s not in
great shape—yet Roger persists, fascinated by the notion of trying something
difficult for the first time in his life. This creates friction with his wife,
Linda (Lindsay Wagner), who doesn't understand why Roger prefers spending time
alone to spending time with her. Per the formula for this sort of thing,
Roger’s new hobby also creates problems at work, because he’s distracted when
he should be focused on a major deal, allowing an ambitious coworker to usurp
Roger’s stature as the firm’s golden boy. In the film’s least developed
subplot, an attractive woman named Paula (Tedde Moore) hits on Roger one day
while he’s out jogging, then tries to seduce him, testing Roger’s fidelity to
the long-suffering Linda.
The characters in Second Wind are drawn fairly well by screenwriter Hal Ackerman (later
to become a popular screenwriting teacher at UCLA’s film school), and some of
the dialogue clicks, especially passages of sarcastic banter. More importantly,
the overall narrative has a pleasing shape, fully exploring Roger’s dalliance
with athletic endeavor. Therefore, fretting that the picture lacks surprise
somewhat misses the point, since the focus is Roger testing his limits.
Naughton, never the deepest of players, lends likeability and sincerity, while
Wagner mostly runs her fingers through her hair. In one unintentionally amusing
bit, her character tries jogging but quickly gives up—quite a change from
familiar images of Wagner running endlessly as The Bionic Woman.
Second Wind: FUNKY
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