Hasta el viento tiene miedo

Summary

Hasta el viento tiene miedo, known in English as Even the Wind is Afraid and The Wind of Fear, is a 1968 (1967 according to the ITESM) Mexican gothic supernatural horror film, written and directed by Carlos Enrique Taboada. It is considered a cult movie in México and has been credited as having revitalized the Mexican horror genre.[1]

Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo
Directed byCarlos Enrique Taboada
Written byCarlos Enrique Taboada
Produced byJesús Grovas
StarringMarga López
Maricruz Olivier
Alicia Bonet
Norma Lazareno
Music byRaúl Lavista
Release date
  • 1968 (1968)
Running time
90 minutes
LanguageSpanish

A remake was released in 2007.

Plot edit

Claudia, a student in a girl’s boarding school, wakes up in the middle of the night haunted by the vision of a young woman calling her name and suffers from a panic attack. Oliver, the school doctor, recommends rest, which is backed by the subprincipal Miss Lucía, but the stern principal, Miss Bernarda, dismisses it and orders Claudia back to class.

Claudia and her closest friends, Kitty, Marina, Ivete, Lili, Silvia, and Verónica, notice the lock to the door of the tower in the school grounds is unlocked; Kitty urges them to peer inside, and Claudia claims she knows the place from her visions. Miss Bernarda finds out and punishes them, forcing them to stay in school during holidays and take remedial lessons. Josefina, a prominent and rule-abiding but very shy student, also stays as she has no family to go to. Miss Bernarda questions Claudia, who explains her vision, and Miss Lucía pleads for her to lift the punishment, mentioning an event related to Claudia’s tale, but the principal once again dismisses the situation.

The following night, Kitty and Ivette find Claudia sleepwalking to the tower and wake her up; Claudia claims again that someone was calling her. Her friends don’t believe her but Claudia says that the girl in her vision is watching them from a window, which the other two spot as well, fleeing in panic and dragging Claudia with them, before joining the rest of the group to tell them what happened.

Miss Bernarda catches Kitty in possession of a photograph of her boyfriend, which she confiscates; that night, Kitty sneaks into the principal’s office to retrieve it, and finds a photograph of the girl from Claudia’s vision. She confesses her actions to Miss Lucía and asks her about the girl, which the subprincipal identifies as Andrea, a former student, who shows herself to the group soon after, which prompts Miss Lucía to disclose the full story: Andrea attended the same school five years earlier thanks to her single mother’s sacrifices, proving a remarkable student, but was also unfairly punished and forbidden by Miss Bernarda to go to her mother when the latter was terminally ill; at the news of her death, the girl climbed to the top of the tower and hung herself. Diego, the groundskeeper, tells Miss Lucía that he has seen Andrea, and soon after the subprincipal sees her too. She tells Miss Bernarda and begs her to send the students home; the principal refuses.

That night, Claudia, sleepwalking again, reaches the top of the tower and sees Andrea’s body hanging from a beam; the shock makes her step back and she falls to the ground to her apparent death. Kitty and the staff find her and take her to the school chapel. Halfway through Miss Bernarda’s prayers, Claudia suddenly wakes, oblivious to what happened. Dr. Oliver declares her healthy and unharmed, although she acts oddly: her performance in class suddenly rockets, she excels in piano and recalls details from the school prior to their time. Her friends and Miss Lucía are concerned, but Miss Bernarda keeps dismissing the situation until she catches Claudia in the music room out of class time and expels her.

The same night, Miss Lucía goes to Miss Bernarda’s room when the power fails. They both hear an eerie wailing; Miss Bernarda, against Miss Lucía’s advice, goes to investigate, finding Claudia at the top of the tower. Andrea’s ghost appears; Miss Lucía arrives and finds Miss Bernarda hanging from a beam.

In the aftermath of the events, Miss Lucía is promoted to principal and makes changes in the school, which turns into a happier place. She and Dr. Oliver discuss Miss Bernarda’s death, officially filed as a suicide. Claudia is long back to herself, oblivious to the events right after her fall; although still haunted by her visions, she realizes that Andrea is finally at peace.

Cast edit

  • Marga López as Bernarda, the principal
  • Maricruz Olivier as Lucía, the vice principal
  • Alicia Bonet as Claudia
  • Norma Lazareno as Kitty
  • Renata Saydel as Ivette
  • Elizabeth Dupeyrón as Josefina
  • Rita Sabre Marroquín as Silvia
  • Irma Castillón as Marina
  • Rafael Llamas as Diego
  • Sadi Dupeyrón (credited as Saidi Dupeyron) as Armando
  • Pamela Susan Hall as Andrea, the ghost
  • Enrique García Álvarez (credited Enrique Garcia) as Doctor Oliver
  • Lourdes Baledón as Verónica

Release edit

Hasta el viento tiene miedo was first released to theaters in Mexico in 1968. It was released to the United States in Blu-ray format in 2020.[2]

Reception edit

Vulture listed the movie as one of their recommendations for Mexican horror, writing that "What we hear in the tension built through the ambience, the eponymous wind in particular, rings more affecting than what’s actually shown onscreen."[3] ComicsBeat praised the film for its acting, character development, and ambiance.[4]

Marca covered Hasta el viento tiene miedo for the film's 50th anniversary in 2018, noting its cult status. They spoke with actress Norma Lazareno, who stated that the movie was ahead of its time. She further commented that the director conspired with technicians to play tricks on the actresses, so that they would become unnerved during filming, which she credits as enhancing the movie's tension and fear factor.[5]

Remake edit

A remake, also titled Hasta el viento tiene miedo, was released in 2007. It was directed by Gustavo Moheno and starred Martha Higareda as the film's protagonist, who is committed after a suicide attempt.[6] The remake received negative critical reception while also receiving a more favorable reaction from the general public.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Eljaiek-Rodríguez, Gabriel (2018). The Migration and Politics of Monsters in Latin American Cinema. Springer International Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 9783319972503.
  2. ^ Bellwoar, Rachel (2020-02-24). "'Even The Wind Is Afraid' Of Ghosts In Taboada's Spanish Horror Movie". COMICON. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  3. ^ Aguilar, Carlos (2019-08-28). "15 Essential Mexican Horror Movies to Watch Now". Vulture. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  4. ^ Denis, Ricardo Serrano (2020-10-20). "Syndicated Comics". The Beat. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  5. ^ "Hasta el Viento tiene Miedo y los 'extraños sucesos' durante la filmación". MARCA Claro México (in Mexican Spanish). 2018-11-01. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  6. ^ "Es "Hasta el viento tiene miedo" un híbrido que hay que ver: Moheno". La Crónica de Hoy. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  7. ^ Hernandez-Rodriguez, R. (2009-11-19). Splendors of Latin Cinema. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-34978-2.

External links edit

  • Hasta el viento tiene miedo at IMDb  
  • Hasta el Viento Tiene Miedo at AllMovie
  • ITESM Review