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IMDbPro

The Dark Wind

  • 1991
  • 15
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
843
YOUR RATING
The Dark Wind (1991)
A Navajo police officer is mixed up in drug smuggling and murder on the reservation.
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
4 Photos
Hard-boiled DetectiveSuspense MysteryDramaMystery

A Navajo police officer is mixed up in drug smuggling and murder on the reservation.A Navajo police officer is mixed up in drug smuggling and murder on the reservation.A Navajo police officer is mixed up in drug smuggling and murder on the reservation.

  • Director
    • Errol Morris
  • Writers
    • Tony Hillerman
    • Neal Jimenez
    • Eric Bergren
  • Stars
    • Lance Baker
    • Betty C. Barlow
    • Gary Basaraba
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    843
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Errol Morris
    • Writers
      • Tony Hillerman
      • Neal Jimenez
      • Eric Bergren
    • Stars
      • Lance Baker
      • Betty C. Barlow
      • Gary Basaraba
    • 25User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Trailer

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast30

    Edit
    Lance Baker
    • Mr. Archer
    Betty C. Barlow
    • Old Navajo Woman #2
    Gary Basaraba
    Gary Basaraba
    • Larry
    Billy Beck
    Billy Beck
    • Motel Clerk
    Arlene Bowman
    • Edna Nezzie
    Guy Boyd
    Guy Boyd
    • Agent Johnson
    Charlie Carpenter
    • Pilot
    Blake Clark
    Blake Clark
    • Ben Gaines
    Julia Collins
    • Old Navajo Woman #1
    Kee Collins
    • Old Navajo Man #1
    Gary Farmer
    Gary Farmer
    • Cowboy Albert Dashee
    Patrick Jensen
    • Albino Boy
    John Karlen
    John Karlen
    • Jake West
    Neil Kayquoptewa
    • Lomatewa
    James Koots
    • Taylor
    Jane Loranger
    • Gail Pauling
    Lonnie Mace
    • Man #2
    Fidel Moreno
    • Workman
    • Director
      • Errol Morris
    • Writers
      • Tony Hillerman
      • Neal Jimenez
      • Eric Bergren
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    5.6843
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    10

    Featured reviews

    will_lee63

    Boom mike technical notes

    Plenty of films of this vintage suffer from boom mikes in frame and the top and dolly tracks visible at the bottom: this is an artifact born of failed productions. When the camera operator composed the shot, he had been told the film was being made for theatrical release, in a 1:1.85 ratio and so when the boom dipped down slightly, but not enough to make it into the "letterbox" they let it slide. Then, after the film failed on the festival circuit or preview process, etc and was dumped to video no one cared to correct the errors - they were all just trying to dump the project on the market as quickly as possible. Had the final "release print" been made, instead of a video transfer from the camera original (mivees and all) we would have been spared the spectacle of seeing mister boom mike. Most of these types of film were being dumped onto the video market before consumers cared to see letterboxed releases, so the transfer was made full frame.
    morrisb705

    Navajo Language spoken by Jim Chee!

    When I first saw The Dark Wind, I was impressed that local people were cast as extras and were speaking the Navajo Language. The subtitles were accurate.

    When I heard Chee speak Navajo, it was broken but he's not a native speaker. I was very impressed that he took the time to actually learn to speak the words.
    8guyboyd

    ...and some are rained out.

    Here's Agent Johnson's take on it. Something did go wrong. Erroll wasn't big on action/fight scenes, but he was very hip to Navajo humor. Some would call it dry. The producers, (over half way through), opted for an action movie but the script wasn't able to support it on that basis. Mr. Hillerman wrote a mystery. Redford brought in an action director for all the fight scenes and Erroll went to his trailer, and it became a stuntmans' movie. (If the mic is in the shot on a 1-take dangerous stunt you just go ahead and use it, I guess.)There were a slew of re-writes and plot changes for the last several scenes in order not to denigrate a particular Hopi ritual that was supposedly pre-approved. The logical resolution of the plot suffered to say the least. I really enjoyed Erroll being there, and felt bad for him in the latter part of the shoot. Lou hung in like a trooper throughout and I thought gave a nuanced and skillful performance.(I hope to get a chance to hear his version of events someday) I don't think the film solved

    the mystery of filming a Tony Hillerman mystery completely but as long as Erroll was in charge it had heart. There were rumors about the lack of distribution being brought on by Carolco's overspending on The Last Action Hero and taking a huge bath. There was no money to advertise Dark Wind or so the gossip was at the time.
    gwoodard

    Lou speaks good Navajo; producers send film straight to video.

    Having grown up in Northern Arizona and living next to the Navajo Reservation, I was very excited when Hillerman's book became a movie; until I saw it. Navajo friends told me that Lou Diamond Phillips actually spoke pretty good Navajo in the film. It's too bad those in charge of production didn't care enough to make the quality film this story should have been. When you see microphones dangling during key scenes (or any scene for that matter) you know somebody didn't give a rip about this project.
    7curtis-8

    Good Adaptation. (and Visible Boom Mics are NOT Filmmaker's fault)

    I like "The Dark Wind." Though it didn't follow the novel to the last detail, it did follow it much more than the subsequent "Mystery" TV movies did. And this one definitely has the flavor of the Hillerman novels. It's not a blockbuster. In fact THIS probably should have been a TV movie as well. While they cherry-picked some details from other novels, the details of Navajo life and behavior that Hillerman describes in his novels are there. Some people didn't like that Leaphorn was inserted in the story though he wasn't in the original novel. I didn't mind that at all--they were intending to make more of these and the most popular stories have both characters. And the handling of Leaphorn is SO MUCH better here than in those Mystery TV-movies (in which they made Leaphorn Chee's "City Guy" foil.)

    There is one thing I want to clear up though--the "boom mic mistakes: so many folks mention. The boom mic that intrudes in to several shots in the home video version (which is the only version we have, unfortunately)is NOT A MISTAKE BY THE DIRECTOR OR THE CINEMATOGRAPHER. It is an error in the transfer of the film to the home video format.

    Many 1.85:1 widescreen films shot in the 80s and 90s were really shot at 1.33:1, non-anamorphic. The "widescreen" effect was then achieved by masking off the top and bottom of the image. Sometimes the studios did this on the print itself, but sometimes they would leave it to the projectionist in the theater--if he/she projected it so that each side reached the edge of the screen and centered the imaged vertically, the "masking" was achieved simply because the top and bottom of the image was bleeding off the screen. I know that was done because back in the day I saw several films where the projectionist did not center the image vertically and all kinds of stuff the audience was never meant to see would be visible--boom mics, lights, rigging, and etc. I have specific memories of seeing this in "Cheech and Chong's Next Movie" and Richard Pryor's "Busting Loose." So, if the folks who released "The Dark Wind" to home video back in the day had given a crap, they'd have either 1) masked the film to 1.85:1 or cropped it in on ALL sides for a proper old-type TV 1.33:1 ratio.

    Anyway, if you have a widescreen TV (and wide is the norm now) all you have to do is blow up the image so that the right and left sides of the image go all the way to the edge and the tops and bottoms get cut off(on my Samsung it's the "Zoom 1" setting). THEN you'll see the image as it was meant to be framed, with no boom mics in sight. AND, I might add, the landscapes and other scenes will look much more impressive as well, as it emphasizes the wide horizons.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Errol Morris, better known for his documentary work, did not finish the film due to "artistic differences" with Robert Redford.
    • Goofs
      A microphone is visible twice: once at the bottom of the screen about 42 minutes into the film; the other at the top of the screen about 10 minutes before the end.
    • Crazy credits
      The producers would like to acknowledge the Hopi and Navajo people. Their land, culture and humor enlightened us throughout the making of "The Dark Wind."
    • Alternate versions
      UK video versions were cut 11 seconds for a "15" rating. The cinema version was uncut at the same category.
    • Connections
      Followed by Skinwalkers (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Love Letters
      Music and Lyrics by Doug Livingston and Harry Shannon

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Dark Wind?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 15, 1992 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Navajo
      • Hopi
    • Also known as
      • El viento negro
    • Filming locations
      • Tuba City, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Carolco Pictures
      • North Face Motion Picture Company
      • Wildwood Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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