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27 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
A Masterpiece by Any Standard., 1 July 2004
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Author:
Prof_Lostiswitz from Cyberia
I've watched The Wind several times, and I am convinced that it is one of
the greatest movies ever. It is certainly the best silent western, and
Lillian Gish has never been so profound as she is here.
What lifts it to the rank of a masterpiece is the passion of the direction
and camerawork, and it certainly shows the advantage in having a mature
artist like director Victor Sjöström. The central character is, as promised,
the wind, and the raw power of nature supersedes the melodrama. You become
engulfed in the tempests and hurricanes, and it is only to easy to
understand that they might drive the young lady mad.
Lillian Gish also does a magnificent job; her usual overacting is actually
appropriate for this role, as the powerful cinematic images have established
the likeliness that she is falling to pieces. This surely has to be her
greatest performance. Dorothy Cumming is also equally powerful as the
embittered "other woman", one of the most evil characters to be found in a
western. The other actors are adequate and satisfying without rising to the
level of genius. Their acting is natural and unforced, unlike most
silents.
It definitely gains from being a silent movie, all that dialogue would
become a distraction if we had to listen to it. It helps that Thames
Silents Orchestra has composed a beautiful and moving soundtrack, one that
would sound good on a CD recording.
If you have any appreciation for silent film, rush out and get this one
today!
22 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Outstanding Atmosphere, 21 March 2002
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
The outstanding atmosphere makes this classic melodrama especially
memorable. The story and the acting would have made a pretty good movie by
themselves, but it is "The Wind" itself that makes it something more. Not
only is the constant presence of the wind a well-conceived figurative
parallel to the events in the characters' lives, but making it work on the
screen was also a remarkable technical achievement for its
era.
Lillian Gish is deservedly praised for her role as Letty, a young woman from
the east who travels to a strange and unforgiving region. This is the kind
of role that Gish always seemed born to play. But Lars Hanson also does an
excellent job in an even more difficult role. In order for the story to
work, Hanson has to make his character fully sympathetic to the audience,
while at the same time making it plausible that Gish's character does not
care for him very much.
It's still very impressive the way that the powerful prairie winds are made
such an indispensable part of the movie. It must have involved a great deal
of work and sacrifice to achieve such realism without fancy technology. And
it is masterful the way that the howling, never-ceasing winds are used to
parallel the conflicts among the characters. This is one of the fine
classics of the silent era that should not be missed.
26 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
ALMOST gave it a 10, 2 January 2004
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Author:
Wayne Malin (wwaayynnee51@hotmail.com) from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
One of the last great silent films.
Letty (Lillian Gish) travels from Virginia to Texas to stay with her
best friend. Unfortunately, he lives in a place in the middle of the
desert and the wind is constantly blowing and throwing sand around.
Letty begins to slowly go mad living there. She marries a man she
doesn't love (handsome Lars Hanson), kills a man who rapes her and
almost kills herself.
The plot is kind of vague but plot isn't a top priority here. Mood is
and this film captures it brilliantly. You get to feel the isolation
that Letty feels and understand her depression. And, even though this
is silent, the music score makes you "hear" the sand constantly
swirling around...and you see it almost all the time. Director Victor
Sjostrom does an excellent job--some scenes are just eye-popping. A
cyclone hitting the small "town" is still impressive and the final wind
storm is unbelievable. Location shooting in the Mohave Desert (where it
reached 110% in the shade!) really helped the film.
The print I saw had a brief introduction by Lillian Gish filmed around
1988 (she, sadly, died in 1993). It seems she brought the film to the
attention of the studio; hand-picked the director and leading man (both
Swedish) and said it was the most uncomfortable film experience she
ever had. But she loved the film. I can see why.
The acting is just great. Gish is superb...a truly great performance
and she's incredibly beautiful. Lars Hanson matches her. He's tall,
strong and undeniably handsome--the sequence in which he realizes Letty
doesn't love him is heart-breaking. Mantagu Love is very good as the
slimy man who attacks Letty. The only bad part is William Orlamond
playing the "comic" relief--he's obnoxious, overacting and unfunny.
I almost gave this a 10...but I couldn't. DEFINITE SPOILER
AHEAD!!!!!The ending ruined this film. It has a big ridiculous happy
ending that I didn't buy for one second. The original ending had Letty
running off into the desert to die. Studio execs at the time wanted a
happy ending so it was filmed, under strong protest, by director
Sjostrom. In fact, he was so upset about changing the ending, he went
back to Sweden and never came back to Hollywood again! SPOILER
ENDED!!!!!!!!
The film was a major bomb when it came out. It's now regarded as a
classic...but not back then. So it's an incredible, great silent film
well worth seeing...but that ending!!!!
15 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
One of Gish's Finest, 16 August 2002
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Author:
Shelly_Servo3000 from Wisconsin
Lillian Gish's legendary career was nearly as lengthy as her life. Time and
time again, she has shown audiences that she was truly one of the finest
actresses who ever lived. A perfect example of her power and artistry is in
"The Wind".
Miss Gish plays "Letty", a young girl from Virginia who moves to her
cousin's house on the wild, open plains of Texas. The plot is very
interesting and very fluid. Miss Gish is wonderful as usual (the sequence of
events at the end of the movie is among the finest performances on film) but
the real star of the movie is Swedish heartthrob Lars Hanson. A real
delightful performance, with real charisma.
A must-see film that deserves more recognition.
12 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Emotion made visible., 3 April 2005
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Author:
Gene Bivins (gayspiritwarrior) from Los Angeles, California
This is quite simply one of the handful of greatest achievements in the history of visual storytelling. There are images as fresh, as inventive as any you will ever see. You may find some of Gish's emoting a little over the top, but immediately there follow moments when she is as subtle and complex as anyone who came after her. She did, after all, invent screen acting as we now know it. One may wish for the original ending Gish and Sjostrom wanted; but the final images as re-shot were still created by artists at the height of their respective powers, and are memorable in their own right. The desert wind lives and howls in this film, as it has done only rarely in films by John Ford and David Lean. Anyone who doubts that cinema is art has never seen The Wind.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
It'll blow you away!, 11 February 2004
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Author:
tpottera from Maryland
Really awesome silent film about a young woman who finds herself at the mercy of people who use and abuse her. With no way to get home, stranded in the mojave desert, Lillian Gish has maybe her best role. The special affects are astounding. The ending is very poor, however. Lillian Gish herself talks about how they insisted a sad ending would ruin her career, even though her films all had sad endings in the past and she was a huge star! She herself, hated the ending they made. Just ignore it and think about how great the whole rest of the film is!
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Silent Masterpiece, 14 February 2005
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Author:
kester_gillard from United Kingdom
An awesome, dark & atmospheric film. Gish is superb as the fragile Letty driven to the brink of madness by the incessant wind whipping up the sand. Her portrayal, with her wide staring eyes & tensing hands as the madness threatens to overwhelm her is stunning. The film takes its time to establish its characters, with a constant backdrop of the menace of the environment & also the danger of violence & the descent into madness, building to a thundering & almost unbearably tense experience with the actual sand storm itself. A true classic of the silent era capturing a performer at the peak of her powers-the image of Letty staring wide eyed through the window as the sand uncovers the body will stay with you.
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The Powerful Saga of Love and Deception., 1 August 2001
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Author:
Amber (sweetiedarling) from Brisbane, Australia
A young girl (Lillian Gish) goes to live with her cousin, but finds herself to be an unwelcome guest. To escape from her cousin's evil wife, she marries against her will. However, the harsh solitude of country life, and the amazing strength of the wind, almost sends her to insanity. An amazingly effective film, which definately proves that Silent Movies are the highest form of cinematic expression!!!
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Would be a wonderful introduction...., 22 February 2005
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Author:
Damfino1895 from Pembrokeshire, Wales
...to the world of the silent era of movies. A most marvellous movie, beautifully acted and directed, even with the sappy ending. Victor Sjostrom directs this movie beautifully and it was a shame he never made another English language movie. Also a shame is that the incredibly handsome talented and charismatic Lars Hanson returned to Sweden when talking pictures emerged, his performance as Lige is incredible and he steals every scene he is in with Lillian Gish, no wonder she hand picked him for the role, in the wedding night sequence he just breaks your heart as he realises his marriage is a sham. Now, time to find a copy of "The Scarlet Letter", my holy grail of movies, if it's half as good as "The Wind" then it'll be more than worth the wait.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Another MGM Silent Classic, 1 September 2000
Author:
nickandrew from PA
Peculiar, but brilliantly filmed silent classic starring Gish as a young woman who battles for her life as she lives in the windy Texas desert, and is torn between two men who want her. Special effects are quite breathtaking for its time and since it was filmed in the scorching Mojave Desert in California.
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