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Don't Look Now (1973)

Director: Nicolas Roeg

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1 review

Movie review

From Time Out Film Guide

A superbly chilling essay in the supernatural, adapted from Daphne du Maurier's short story about a couple, shattered by the death of their small daughter, who go to Venice to forget. There, amid the hostile silences of an off-season resort, they are approached by a blind woman with a message of warning from the dead child; and half- hoping, half-resisting, they are sucked into a terrifying vortex of time where disaster may be foretold but not forestalled. Conceived in Roeg's usual imagistic style and predicated upon a series of ominous associations (water, darkness, red, shattering glass), it's hypnotically brilliant as it works remorselessly toward a sense of dislocation in time; an undermining of all the senses, in fact, perfectly exemplified by Sutherland's marvellous Hitchcockian walk through a dark alley where a banging shutter, a hoarse cry, a light extinguished at a window, all recur as in a dream, escalating into terror the second time round because a hint of something seen, a mere shadow, may have been the dead child.

Author: TM 0000-00-00 00:00:00

Time Out Film Guide


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  • Randy said...
    Posted on Jan 19 2009 04:32 Don't Look Now spans ancient fears, the supernatural, modern day confusion, and caution with the future. A little fright along the way always seals the interest.
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