BLIND
DATE
1984/USA/103
Minutes
Tagline- The ultimate hi-tech thriller.
Description-
"A man goes blind
trying to remember his girlfriend" goes the IMDB description. Rather the
movie is about an obsessed man playing 'peeping tom' and stalking his
institutionalized ex-girlfriend's look-alike, who later loses his eyesight
on being chased by the girl's angry boyfriend.
'Blind Date' is a tepid
thriller that delivers 90 minutes of melodrama and a half-cooked tale of
romance and obsession, rather than any genuine thrills. Jonathan is an American
working in Athens as an advertising executive; he has a hot secretary Claire as
a devoted girlfriend, a job which allows him to ogle at hundreds of gorgeous
models during swimsuit shoots, and a 'body double' of his ex-girlfriend whose
house he conveniently breaks into whenever he wants. He is a creep and an
opportunist, and as such the character evokes no sense of sympathy for the
situations he lands up into. I actually wonder why a sweet and caring girl like
Claire (played by Kirstie Allie) would want to stand up to a womanizing and
insensitive guy like Jonathan. But then love is blind, right?
Meanwhile in the city,
a maniac is killing women by cutting them up with surgical precision. He first
attacks these women at their apartments, sedates them, and then makes them
watch the decapitation of their own bodies.
One fine night, while
spying on the body double, Jonathan is given a run by her enraged boyfriend and
loses his eyesight on hitting a tree. The doctors cannot explain his situation,
except that it was probably induced by stress (at seeing the resurrection of
his 'lost girlfriend'). After this, an experimental scientist implants a visual
stimulant 'microchip' in his brain, which allows perceiving objects through
grids and lines (as in a computer projected 3D image). Jonathan then spends his
time feeding computer game signals into his brain via a walkman type device
which helps him in recognising objects, learning to cross roads, getting
intimately acquainted with the 'lost' girlfriend by studying her curves while
she sleeps at night etc. On one of his slightly surreptitious outings
(his girlfriend does not appreciate a blind man walking alone), he
'sees' and hears a cab with a bad engine going near a block of apartments; some
time after, a woman screams from the same place. Jonathan rushes in and comes
face to face with the killer, the surgical killer, and manages to run to
the rooftop where he has a narrow escape after police sirens scare the killer
away.
Jonathan then traces
the killer to Rachel's (the body double) apartment and engages in a cat and
mouse game with him, culminating in the killer's grisly end.
The pacing of the movie
is a major put off, as it takes ages for the suspense sequences to kick in; and
it is fleeting when they finally do. In three-fourth of the running time,
there is a parallel drawn between Jonathan's dubious activities and the killer,
with no point to connect the two. Thereafter, the blind protagonist bumps into
the crazy killer right outside a crime scene and can only recall a human shape
in the vaguest form, and a taxi with a screeching sound. However within minutes,
he has actually traced the killer to Rachel with foresight that is
inexplicable, considering that the character is mostly daft and inept in the
first 70 minutes. The music is typical soapy romantic stuff of the 80's and
thankfully minimal, while the character development is mostly superficial and
sketchy, except for Kristen who is far more sympathetic than Jonathan deserves.
Even for entertainment purposes, the movie falls flat at every level.
it is an interesting
idea poorly executed, and it would have been much better if the 'chance
meeting' between Jonathan and the killer had taken place earlier so that the
former would have been on track of the killer sooner, and hence the end result
more credible. Also, the sci-fi element boasted by the movie poster and
advertisements is a mere gimmick, as the supposed high tech viewing equipment
is very rudimentary, and at the very best it confuses our 'poor' Jonathan into
wondering about what he had really seen (of course he got a brilliant brainwave
afterwards !).
The movie has been
released on Blu-Ray by boutique label Scorpion Releasing in 2018. The video is
touted to be a 4K scan of the original negative, and while details and clarity
are generally sharp, the picture does dip into softness here and there. Skin
tones are neutral and balanced, while the 5.1 DTS-HD MA soundtrack is
adequate. However, while dialogue exchanges are generally audible, the sound
effects are a bit screechy. English subtitles have been provided, and extras
include a theatrical trailer, the slightly longer theatrical cut in SD, still
gallery, and a brief look into the career of the director Niko Mastorakis.