In the English countryside, Sarah Rexton, recently blinded in a horse riding accident, moves in with her uncle's family and gallantly adjusts to her new condition, unaware that a killer stalks them.
Mia Farrow
Sarah
Dorothy Alison
Betty Rexton
Robin Bailey
George Rexton
Diane Grayson
Sandy Rexton
Brian Rawlinson
Barker
Norman Eshley
Steve Reding
Paul Nicholas
Jacko
Christopher Matthews
Frost
Michael Elphick
Gypsy Tom
Barrie Houghton
Gypsy Jack
Lila Kaye
Gypsy Mother
Donald Bisset
Doctor
Max Faulkner
Steve's Man #1
Scott Fredericks
Steve's Man #2
Reg Harding
Steve's Man #3
Director
Richard Fleischer
Writer
Brian Clemens
March 15, 2020
8
Fleischer's criminally underseen and undervalued woman in peril pic.
See No Evil (AKA: Blind Terror) is directed by Richard Fleischer and written by Brian Clemens. It stars Mia Farrow, Dorothy Alison, Robin Bailey, Diane Grayson, Brian Rawlinson, Norman Eshley and Paul Nicholas. Music is by Elmer Bernstein and cinematography by Gerry Fisher.
Recently blinded in a horse riding accident, Sarah Rexton (Farrow) moves in with her uncle's family out in the English countryside. Adjusting to her new way of life, things quickly move from calm to pure terror as a murderer stalks the family - with Sarah unaware there is a killer in the house with her...
It was a flop upon release back in 71 and pretty much disappeared out of sight unto the next millennium. If the public and critics were judging it harshly against the superb and similar Audrey Hepburn movie, "Wait Until Dark", from three years earlier? I'm not sure, for this deserves a re-evaluation.
This is a genuine slice of edgy suspense, the kind we rarely see done efficiently these days. It's also boosted by a terrific turn from Farrow, who gives her all for the part as Fleischer puts her well and truly through the mangler. The killer is kept hidden until the edge of the seat last quarter - where we only ever see his cowboy boots throughout, so thus we have a strong mystery element as well.
There's no blood letting as such, more glimpses of the aftermath of murders, but once Sarah comes under attack and has to fight for her life from the dark world she is in - the effect is more frightening then any repeated blood death kill we see all the time now. With the great Bernstein scoring the music and Fleischer (multi genre legend) turning is tricks of the trade, it's easy to forgive the improbabilities of it all and enjoy the thrill ride. 7.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00