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Death Hunt

 
Movies:

Death Hunt

  • Director: Peter Hunt
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Chase Movie
  • Themes: Survival in the Wilderness
  • Main Cast: Charles Bronson, Lee Marvin, Andrew Stevens, Carl Weathers, Ed Lauter
  • Release Year: 1981
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 96 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Set in the '30s, Mountie Millen (Lee Marvin) is assigned to track down accused murderer Johnson (Charles Bronson), who has escaped in the high passes of the Canadian Rockies. Johnson, a trapper, has extensive knowledge of wilderness living, but Millen has the resources of the Canadian police at his beck and call. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide

Review

Death Hunt is an entertaining if rather familiar throwback to the days of classic action cinema. The "unjustly accused outlaw versus grizzled lawman" plotline won't win any prizes for originality but, it is solidly constructed and spiced up with plenty of amusing tough-guy banter by writers Michael Grais and Mark Victor. Better yet, it gives Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson plenty of room to strut their stuff: although the two only share one brief scene together, they anchor the film with their tough, no-nonsense charisma. Their work is ably supported by an array of excellent character actors, with the best turns by Carl Weathers as Marvin's trash-talking fellow mountie and Ed Lauter as the hateful, sadistic trapper who starts the whole mess by angering Bronson. Finally, and most importantly, director Peter Hunt directs with economy and skill, adding plenty of punch to the action and making excellent use of the snowy, scenic Yukon location. In short, Death Huntis a solid pick for action buffs, especially fans of Bronson and Marvin. ~ Donald Guarisco, All Movie Guide

Cast

Scott Hylands - Pilot; Angie Dickinson - Vanessa; William Sanderson - Ned Warren; Jon Cedar - Hawkins; James O'Connell - Hurley; Len Lesser - Lewis; Maury Chaykin - Clarence; August Schellenberg - Deak; Rayford Barnes - Trapper; Henry Beckman - Lusk; Tantoo Cardinal - Indian Woman; Dick Davalos - Beeler; Maurice Kowalewski - Charlie Rat; Denis Lacroix - Jimmy Tom; Sean McCann - News Reporter; James McIntire - Trapper #2

Credit

Tom Doherty - Art Director, Robert Baylis - Associate Producer, Olga Dimitrov - Costume Designer, Frank Ernst - First Assistant Director, Peter Hunt - Director, John F. Burnett - Editor, Allan Jacobs - Editor, Raymond Chow - Executive Producer, Albert S. Ruddy - Executive Producer, Jerrold Immel - Composer (Music Score), Ted Haworth - Production Designer, James Devis - Cinematographer, Murray Shostak - Producer, Richard Lightstone - Sound/Sound Designer, Michael Grais - Screenwriter, Mark Victor - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Hunter's Blood; Nightmare at Bitter Creek; Shoot to Kill; Snow Kill; Southern Comfort; Surviving the Game
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Death Hunt

Promotional poster
Directed by Peter R. Hunt
Produced by Murray Shostak
Written by Michael Grais and Mark Victor
Starring Charles Bronson, Lee Marvin and Angie Dickinson
Music by Jerrold Immel
Cinematography James Devis
Editing by John F. Burnett and Allan Jacobs
Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation
Release date(s) June 18, 1981 (Netherlands)
Running time 97 min.
Country United States
Language English

Death Hunt is a 1981 film starring Charles Bronson, Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Carl Weathers, Maury Chaykin, Ed Lauter and Andrew Stevens. The film was directed by Peter Hunt, and was a fictionalized account of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police pursuit of a man named Albert Johnson.

Contents

Plot summary

In the Yukon Territory of Canada in 1931, solitary American trapper Albert Johnson comes across an organised dog fight. One of the dogs, a white German Shepherd, is badly injured and Johnson forcibly takes it, paying $200 to its owner, a vicious trapper named Hazel.

Aggrieved by his treatment and claiming the dog was stolen from him, Hazel leads several of his friends to Johnson's isolated cabin. The men attack and Johnson shoots dead one of them, Jimmy Tom, after he has shot the dog, which Johnson has nursed back to health.

Once they discover that Johnson has bought 700 rounds of ammunition from the local trading post and paid in $100 bills, the trappers become convinced that he is the "mad trapper," a possibly mythical, psychopathic, serial-killing figure who supposedly murders other trappers in the wilderness and takes their gold teeth.

An old trapper, Bill Lusk, warns Johnson that the law is coming for him. Johnson fortifies his cabin.

Sergeant Edgar Millen, commander of the local Royal Canadian Mounted Police post, seems a tough but humane man. He has a tracker named Sundog Brown and a new constable named Alvin Adams, plus a new lover in Vanessa McBride.

Millen leads a posse of mounties and trappers to the cabin. He parleys with Johnson, telling him that he has a pretty good idea of what happened and if Johnson comes with him they can get it sorted out. However, before Johnson can answer, one of the trappers opens fire. Several of the trappers end up killed, including one who is accidentally shot by one of his friends. The posse uses dynamite to blow up the cabin, but Johnson escapes, shooting dead a mountie, Constable Hawkins.

Millen, Sundog and Adams, joined by Hazel with his tracker dogs, set off into the frozen wilderness after Johnson. The case has made front-page news across the country, so many trappers also set off after the RCMP, attracted by a $1,000 bounty that has been placed on Johnson's life. Captain[1] Hank Tucker, a Royal Canadian Air Force pilot, is also sent by the government to join the hunt, which is causing a national embarrassment. He reveals that Johnson was a member of a United States Army special intelligence unit during World War I.

Johnson utilizes a number of tracking techniques to avoid Millen's posse and the bounty hunters, living off the land in treacherous winter conditions. As the hunt continues, Millen begins to respect Johnson's uncommon abilities while growing to resent the intrusion of so many outsiders.

Lusk comes across two of the trappers camping in the wilderness and shoots them both dead before pulling out their gold teeth. He, it seems, is the real mad trapper.

The pursuers catch up to Johnson. Tucker begins to carelessly machine-gun the area, killing Sundog. The enraged Millen and Adams shoot down the plane with their rifles; Tucker crashes into a canyon wall and is killed. Johnson escapes after shooting Hazel.

Lusk comes across Johnson and tries to kill him, presumably attracted by the reward. Johnson tricks him and captures him at gunpoint. Millen spots Johnson and opens fire; the bullet hits him in the face, rendering him unrecognisable. As they examine the body, both Millen and Adams spot the real Johnson, dressed in Lusk's clothes, on a ridge above them. The man they shot was Lusk dressed in Johnson's clothes.

The mounties allow Johnson to flee into Alaska, well aware that everything he did was in self-defense. As the other pursuers appear, Adams tells them that Millen has killed Johnson. A trapper finds that the body has a pocket full of gold teeth, so they celebrate the killing of the "mad trapper."

Cast

Historical inaccuracies

In reality, the actual Constable Millen was shot and killed by Johnson during the manhunt. Johnson was eventually killed after a remarkable and highly-publicized pursuit over several weeks. Of special note was the fact that Johnson eluded his RCMP pursuers in the dead of winter in the lower Arctic, crossing the Richardson Mountains in the process, a feat previously considered impossible. Johnson was finally surrounded by Mounties on the frozen Eagle River and shot and killed on February 17, 1932.

World War I veteran Wop May was a bush pilot who was involved in the hunt for Johnson. Contrary to the movie, May - represented as "Captain Tucker" - did not wildly shoot at everyone including the posse on the ground. He also did not crash and die on a mountaintop after being shot down by the posse. May survived the manhunt and lived until 1952.

In the movie, it was claimed that Johnson was a veteran of the First World War, with Captain Tucker providing Johnson's military service record to Millen and the other RCMP officers. In reality, virtually nothing is known of Albert Johnson before his arrival at Fort McPherson on July 9, 1931.

Footnotes

  1. ^ This is a mistake. Tucker's actual rank would be Flight Lieutenant.

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