Lizzy is a tough, resourceful frontierswoman settling a remote stretch of land on the 19th-century American frontier. Isolated from civilization in a desolate wilderness where the wind never stops howling, she begins to sense a sinister presence that seems to be borne of the land itself, and when a newlywed couple arrive at a nearby homestead, their presence amplifies Lizzy's fears, setting into motion a shocking chain of events.
Horror Westerns are incredibly hard to accomplish, and director Emma Tammis boldness and imagination makes The Wind a spooky breath of fresh air.
Jake Watt
Read Jake's full article...
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-the-wind-a-paranoid-western-nightmare
Head to https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/sff for more Sydney Film Festival reviews.
Bertaut
Very well made and genuinely creepy socio-political allegory, although the ambiguity and pacing won't be for everyone
Disbelief is not just about men disbelieving us. It is about our own disbelief in ourselves.
Amber Tamblyn; "I'm Done With Not Being Believed"; The New York Times (September 16, 2017)
The Wind is ostensibly a horror movie about a woman being terrorised by a demon on the American frontier. However, look a little deeper, and you'll find it may very well be a study of prairie madness. However, look even deeper, and it's really a metaphorical examination of the mindset of a less enlightened time, when women were very much second-class citizens who were expected to tend to the home and do little else. A f...