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The Deer Hunter

 
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The Deer Hunter

  • Director: Michael Cimino
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Ensemble Film, Anti-War Film
  • Themes: Home From the War, Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Robert De Niro, John Cazale, John Savage, Meryl Streep, Christopher Walken
  • Release Year: 1978
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 183 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

One of several 1978 films dealing with the Vietnam War (including Hal Ashby's Oscar-winning Coming Home), Michael Cimino's epic second feature The Deer Hunter was both renowned for its tough portrayal of the war's effect on American working class steel workers and notorious for its ahistorical use of Russian roulette in the Vietnam sequences. Structured in five sections contrasting home and war, the film opens in Clairton, PA, as Mike (Robert De Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), and Stan (John Cazale, in his last film) celebrate the wedding of their friend Steve (John Savage) and go on a final deer hunt before the men leave for Vietnam. Mike treats hunting as a test of skill, lecturing Stan about the value of "one shot" deer slaying and brushing off Nick's urgings to appreciate nature's beauty. As Mike ruminates post-hunt, the film cuts to the horror of Vietnam, where the men are captured by Vietcong soldiers who force Mike and Nick to play Russian roulette for the V.C.'s amusement. Mike turns the game to his advantage so they can escape captivity, but the men are permanently scarred by the episode. Steve loses his legs; Nick vanishes in the Saigon Russian roulette parlors. Mike returns alone to Clairton a changed man, as he rejects the killing of the deer hunt and finds solace with Nick's old girlfriend Linda (Meryl Streep). Disgusted by the antics of his male cohorts at home, Mike decides to bring Steve back from a veterans' hospital, and he returns to Saigon to find Nick. As Saigon falls, Mike discovers how far gone Nick is; the survivors gather in Clairton for a funeral breakfast, singing an impromptu rendition of "God Bless America." ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Review

Realizing that the three-hour film would need to be a prestige event to draw public interest, Universal followed Grease producer Allan Carr's advice and opened The Deer Hunter for one week for Academy Award consideration in December 1978, putting off the national opening until February 1979. The gambit succeeded. The film won the Best Picture prize from the New York Film Critics' Circle and got nine Academy Award nominations as it went into national release, including Best Picture, Best Director, and acting nods for Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, and Meryl Streep. The movie went on to beat Coming Home for Best Picture and Best Director and also picked up Oscars for Walken's performance, Sound, and Editing. As the film's acclaim grew, it also aroused objections to the depiction of the Vietcong as racist from, among others, Coming Home star Jane Fonda, as well as criticisms from numerous Vietnam reporters that director Michael Cimino was ill-informed about real Vietnam experience, not having served in the war himself. Regardless of the disputes over the veracity of the Russian roulette scenes, they create an indelible metaphor for warfare and its atmosphere of sudden, random violence. While the press notes suggest that the final song was meant to be affirmative, the searing sense of loss that builds up throughout the film renders it profoundly ambiguous. This combination of ambivalence, brutality, and controversy echoed American culture's experience of Vietnam, making The Deer Hunter an even more telling cultural artifact than may have been intended. The film's awards and acclaim manifested Hollywood's willingness finally to reckon one way or another with a war that had been all but absent from movie screens while it was happening, leading the way for such later films as Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket (1987) and Oliver Stone's Platoon (1986) and Born on the Fourth of July (1989). With the prizes and dissension, The Deer Hunter became a popular hit, enabling Cimino to have full artistic freedom for his next film, the financially disastrous Heaven's Gate. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

George Dzundza - John; Chuck Aspergren - Axel; Shirley Stoler - Steven's Mother; Rutanya Alda - Angela; Pierre Segui - Julien; Mady Kaplan - Axel's Girl; Christopher Colombi, Jr. - Wedding Man; Paul D'Amato - Sergeant; Joe Grifasi - Bandleader; Mary Ann Haenel - Stan's Girl; Richard Kuss - Linda's Father; Amy Wright - Bridesmaid; Michael Wollet - Stock Boy; Joseph Strand - Bingo Caller

Credit

Kim Edgar Swados - Art Director, Joann Carelli - Associate Producer, Marion Rosenberg - Associate Producer, Joann Carelli - Consultant/advisor, Eric Seelig - Costume Designer, Charles Okun - First Assistant Director, Michael Cimino - Director, Peter Zinner - Editor, Stanley Myers - Composer (Music Score), Del Acevedo - Makeup, Ed Butterworth - Makeup, Nick McLean - Camera Operator, Fred Schuler - Camera Operator, Vilmos Zsigmond - Cinematographer, Michael Cimino - Producer, Michael Deeley - Producer, Barry Spikings - Producer, John Peverall - Producer, Richard C. Goddard - Set Designer, Alan Hicks - Set Designer, Dick Goddard - Set Designer, Fred Cramer - Special Effects, Darin Knight - Sound/Sound Designer, Quinn K. Redeker - Screen Story, Michael Cimino - Screen Story, Louis Garfinkle - Screen Story, Michael Cimino - Screenwriter, Deric Washburn - Screenwriter, Louis Garfinkle - Screenwriter, June Samson - Script Supervisor

Similar Movies

Apocalypse Now; The Big Parade; Born on the Fourth of July; The Bridge on the River Kwai; Coming Home; Full Metal Jacket; Gardens of Stone; Hamburger Hill; Jacknife; Platoon; A Rumor of War; To Kill a Clown; Five Gates to Hell; Resurrected; The Road Back; Bullet in the Head; Apocalypse Now Redux
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Wikipedia: The Deer Hunter
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The Deer Hunter

Theatrical poster
Directed by Michael Cimino
Produced by Barry Spikings
Michael Deeley
Michael Cimino
John Peverall
Written by Story:
Quinn K. Redeker
Deric Washburn
Michael Cimino
Louis Garfinkle
Screenplay:
Deric Washburn
Starring Robert De Niro
John Cazale
John Savage
Christopher Walken
Meryl Streep
George Dzundza
Chuck Aspegren
Music by Stanley Myers
Cinematography Vilmos Zsigmond
Editing by Peter Zinner
Distributed by Universal Pictures (US)
EMI Films (non-US)
Release date(s) December 8, 1978
Running time 182 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$15,000,000
Gross revenue US$48,979,328

The Deer Hunter is a 1978 war drama film co-written and directed by Michael Cimino about a trio of Russian American[1][2][3] steel worker friends and their infantry service in the Vietnam War. It is loosely inspired by the German novel Three Comrades (1937), by World War I veteran Erich Maria Remarque, the author of All Quiet on the Western Front, which follows the lives of a trio of German World War I veterans in 1920s Weimar Germany. Like the novel, The Deer Hunter meditates and explores the moral and mental consequences of war violence and politically manipulated patriotism upon the meaning of friendship, honor, and family in a tightly knit community and deals with controversial issues such as drug abuse, suicide, infidelity and mental illness. The film won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director.

The film stars Robert De Niro, Christopher Walken, Meryl Streep, John Savage, John Cazale, George Dzundza and Chuck Aspegren. The story takes place in Clairton, a small working class town on the Monongahela River south of Pittsburgh and then in Vietnam, somewhere in woodland and in Saigon, during the Vietnam War. It was filmed in the Pittsburgh metro area; Cleveland and Mingo Junction, Ohio; Weirton, West Virginia; the North Cascades National Park in Washington state, the Patpong district of Bangkok in Thailand (imitating the Saigon red-light district), and Sai Yok, Kanchanaburi Province (also in Thailand).

Contents

Plot

In Clairton, a small working class town in Western Pennsylvania during the late 1960s, Ukrainian-American steel workers Michael (Robert De Niro), Steven (John Savage), and Nick (Christopher Walken), with the support of their friends Stanley (John Cazale), John (George Dzundza) and Axel (Chuck Aspegren), are preparing for two rites of passage: marriage and military service.

The opening scenes set the character traits of the three main actors. Michael is the no-nonsense, serious but unassuming leader of the three, Steven the loving, near-groom, pecked at by his mother for not wearing a scarf with his tuxedo and Nick is the quiet, introspective man who loves hunting because, "I like the trees...you know...the way the trees are...".

Michael tells Nick that if it was not for him, he would hunt alone, because the other three are "assholes..I love 'em but they're assholes... without you Nicky, I hunt alone." Nick asks Mike if he is scared about joining the Army and going to Vietnam, and Michael shrugs it off. He states his intent to get a deer with just one bullet. "One bullet. The deer has to be taken with one shot. I try to tell people that, they don't listen." This motif plays heavily later in the film.

Before the trio ships out, Steven and his girlfriend, Angela (who is pregnant by another man but loved by Steven nonetheless) get married in an elaborate Russian Orthodox wedding. In the meantime, Michael struggles with his feelings for Nick's lovely but pensive girlfriend Linda (Meryl Streep), who has just moved out of her abusive father's house. At the wedding reception held at the local VFW, the guys all get drunk, dance, sing and have a good time, but then notice an Army Green Beret in full dress uniform sitting at the end of the bar. Michael buys the soldier a drink and tries to strike up a conversation with him to find out what Vietnam is like, but the soldier ignores Michael. After Michael confronts him to explain that he, Steven and Nick are going to Vietnam, the Green Beret raises his glass and says "fuck it" to everyone's shock and amazement. Obviously disturbed and under mental anguish, the Green Beret again toasts them with "fuck it". After being restrained by the others from starting a fight with the Green Beret, Michael goes back to the bar with the others and in a mocking jest to the Green Beret, raises his glass and toasts him with "fuck it". The Green Beret then glances over at Michael and grins smugly, knowing exactly what Michael and the others will face. Later, during the wedding toast to Steven and Angela, a toast with a tradition of good luck for the couple who drinks from conjoined goblets without spilling a drop, a drop of blood-red wine unknowingly spills on her wedding gown, again foreshadowing the coming events. Near the end of the reception, Nick asks Linda to marry him, and she agrees. Later that night, after a drunk and naked Michael runs through the streets of town, Nick chases him down and begs Michael not to leave him "over there" if anything happens.

The next morning finds all the friends (minus Steven) going deer hunting. After a confrontation during a rest stop with Stanley (who has forgotten his boots) Nick remonstrates with him for denying Stanley his extra pair. Michael angrily fires a shot in to the air as an expression of his feelings. After the hunt, Michael gets his deer with one bullet, but the other guys are more interested in drinking and goofing off. They return home, and the second act ends with a poignant, dialogue-less scene in the tavern with a Chopin nocturne played by John.

The film then jumps to a war-torn village. An unconscious Mike (a staff sergeant in the US Army Special Forces) wakes up to see a North Vietnamese Regular throw a stick grenade into a hiding place full of civilians. In revenge Mike burns the NVA with a flame thrower and then shoots him numerous times with an M16. Meanwhile a unit of UH-1 helicopters drops off several US troops, Nick and Steven among them. During the infantry combat the three (Michael, Steven, and Nick) unexpectedly find each other just before they are captured and held in a riverside prisoner of war camp along with other US Army and ARVN prisoners. For entertainment, the sadistic guards force their prisoners to play Russian roulette and gamble on the outcome. Hearing gunshots from the hut (where the game takes place) above the partially submerged cage where the three friends are enclosed, Steven, awaiting his turn, becomes increasingly agitated. Mike tries to soothe him. Nick, also agitated but in a less demonstrative manner, tries to attract Mike's attention but fails.

All three friends are forced to play; Steven aims the gun above his head, grazing himself with the bullet and is punished by incarceration to an underwater cage, full of rats and the bodies of others who earlier faced the same fate. Michael and Nick orchestrate the killing of their captors and escape from the prison. Mike had earlier argued with Nick about whether Steven could be saved but after killing their captors Mike rescues Steven.

The three float downriver on a tree branch. An American helicopter accidentally finds them, but only Nick is able to climb aboard. The weakened Steven falls back into water and Mike plunges in the water to rescue him. Unluckily, Steven breaks his legs in the fall. Mike helps him to reach the river bank, and then carries him through the jungle to friendly lines. Nick is psychologically damaged and recuperating in a military hospital in Saigon with no knowledge on the status of his friends. At night, he aimlessly stumbles through the red-light district. At one point, he encounters Julién Grinda (Pierre Segui), a champagne-drinking friendly Frenchman outside a gambling den where men play Russian roulette for money. Grinda entices the reluctant Nick to participate, and leads him into the den. Mike is present in the den, watching the game, but the two friends do not notice each other at first. When Mike does see Nick, he is unable to get his attention due to a large hullabaloo. As Nick sees the game again, bad memories arise in his mind. He violently breaks into the game taking a gun from a table and shooting twice — first at a head of one of the playing Vietnamese, then at his own head, luckily encountering an empty chamber in a gun's cylinder each time. He runs out of the den and leaves with Grinda. Mike chases after them. Grinda says a bravery like Nick's could make him a rich man, and which point he shows Nick a wad of cash. Nick throws the handful of money into the air; traffic stalls as people attempt to gather it. Mike cannot catch up with Nick and Grinda.

Back in the U.S., Mike returns home but maintains a low profile. He is embarrassed by the fuss made over him by Linda and his neighbors. Mike struggles with his feelings, as he thinks both Nick and Steven are dead or missing. He grows close to Linda but it is only because of the friend they both think they have lost. Mike goes hunting with Axel, John and Stanley one more time, and after tracking a beautiful deer across the woods, takes his "one shot" but pulls the rifle up just before he fires, missing on purpose. He then sits on a rock escarpment and yells out, "OK?", which echoes back at him from the opposing rock faces leading down to the river, signifying his fight with his mental demons over losing Steven and Nick. He also berates Stanley for carrying around a small revolver and waving it around, at one point spinning the cylinder and pointing it at Stanley's head, "How ya feel now??" He knows the horror of war and wants no part of it anymore.

Mike goes to see Angela he finds her lethargic, she writes a phone number on a scrap of paper. Steven is not far away at a local Veterans' hospital. He has lost both his legs and is partially paralyzed. Mike goes to visit Steven but Steven does not want to come home. Steven reveals that someone in Saigon has been mailing large amounts of cash to him, and Mike is convinced that it is Nick. Mike brings Steven home, and then travels to Saigon just before its fall in 1975. With the reluctant help of the Frenchman Julién Grinda, who has made a lot of money from the Russian-roulette-playing American, he finds Nick in a crowded roulette club, but Nick appears to have no recollection of his friends or his home in Pennsylvania. Mike sees the needle tracks on his arm, a sign of drug abuse. He realizes that Nick thinks he (Michael) and Steven are dead, since he is the only one who made it back on the helicopter. Mike enters himself in a game of Russian roulette against Nick, attempting to persuade him to come home, but Nick's mind is gone. In the last moment, after Mike's attempts to remind him of their trips hunting together, he finally breaks through, and Nick recognizes Mike and smiles. Nick then tells Mike, "one shot" and raises the gun to his temple and pulls the trigger. Unfortunately, the bullet is in the gun chamber and Nick kills himself. Horrified, Michael tries to revive him but to no avail.

Back in America, there is a funeral for Nick, whom Michael brings home, good to his promise. The film ends with the whole cast at the wake, singing "God Bless America" and toasting in his honor.

Production

The film began with a spec screenplay called "The Man Who Came To Play", written by Louis Garfinkle and Quinn K. Redeker. The script, while unrelated to the Vietnam War, nonetheless centered on a group of men who travel to Las Vegas to play Russian Roulette. Producer Barry Spikings, who had purchased the script from Garfinkle–Redeker, pitched the story to director Michael Cimino, who then adapted the Russian Roulette idea into a story he was preparing about Pennsylvania steelworkers who go off to Vietnam. Cimino then worked for six weeks with Deric Washburn, before firing him (Cimino and Washburn had previously collaborated with Stephen Bochco on the screenplay for Silent Running).

While Garfinkle and Redeker had nothing to do with the writing or filming of The Deer Hunter, they ultimately shared a "Story By" writer's credit with Cimino and Washburn, since Cimino had adapted the Russian Roulette idea from "The Man Who Came To Play" into the film. Cimino would later claim to have written the entire screenplay himself, although a WGA arbitration awarded Washburn sole "Screenplay By" credit.[citation needed] All four writers received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay for this film.

Filming locations included:

Cast

Mike (Robert De Niro) in Vietnam
Actor Role
Robert De Niro S/Sgt. Michael "Mike" Vronsky
John Cazale Stanley aka "Stosh"
John Savage Steven Pushkov
Christopher Walken Cpl. Nikanor "Nick" Chevotarevich
Meryl Streep Linda
George Dzundza John Welch
Chuck Aspegren Peter "Axel" Axelrod
Shirley Stoler Steven's mother
Rutanya Alda Angela Ludhjduravic-Pushkov
Pierre Segui Julién Grinda
Amy Wright Bridesmaid
Richard Kuss Linda's father
Joe Grifasi Bandleader
Paul D'Amato Sergeant

Theme music and songs

The theme music and songs play an important role in this movie.

  • The theme music is Stanley Myers' "Cavatina" (also known as 'She Was Beautiful'), played with guitar by John Williams. It is a piece of melancholic music, reminding of the quiet and languid life in Clairton.

Reception

Academy Awards record
1. Best Supporting Actor, Christopher Walken
2. Best Director, Michael Cimino
3. Best Editing, Peter Zinner
4. Best Picture, Barry Spikings, Michael Deeley, Michael Cimino, John Peverall
5. Best Sound, Richard Portman, William L. McCaughey, Aaron Rochin, C. Darin Knight
Golden Globe Awards record
1. Best Director, Michael Cimino
BAFTA Awards record
1. Best Cinematography, Vilmos Zsigmond
2. Best Editing, Peter Zinner

The Deer Hunter won Academy Awards in 1978 for Best Picture, Best Director (Michael Cimino), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Christopher Walken), Best Film Editing, and Best Sound. In addition, it was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Robert De Niro), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Meryl Streep), Best Cinematography (Vilmos Zsigmond) and Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen (Michael Cimino, Deric Washburn, Louis Garfinkle and Quinn Redeker).

In 1996, The Deer Hunter was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

It is ranked # 53 on the American Film Institute's list of the 100 Greatest American Movies of All Time.[4]

The theme song of The Deer Hunter, "Cavatina", written by Stanley Myers and performed by classical guitarist John Williams is commonly known as "The Theme from The Deer Hunter".

During the Berlin International Film Festival in 1979 the Soviet delegation expressed its indignation with the film which, in their opinion, insulted the Vietnamese people in numerous scenes. The socialist states felt obliged to voice their solidarity with the “heroic people of Vietnam”. They protested against the screening of the film and insisted that it violated the statutes of the festival, since it in no way contributed to the “improvement of mutual understanding between the peoples of the world”.[5] The ensuing domino effect led to the walk-outs of the Cubans, East Germans, Bulgarians, Poles and Czechoslovakians, and two members of the jury resigned in sympathy.

The film holds a strong 91% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 43 reviews.[6]

The Deer Hunter ranks 467th in Empire magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.[7]

American Film Institute recognition

However, reception of the film was not all positive amongst critics and the BBC film critic Mark Kermode is quoted as saying the film is "about 3 hours too long". He also calls it "one of the worst films ever made,a rambling self indulgent, self aggrandising barf-fest steeped in manipulatively racist emotion, and notable primarily for its farcically melodramatic tone which is pitched somewhere between shrieking hysteria and somnambulist somberness". Added to this he said it was "a testament to the fact that, if allowed to do whatever they want, filmmakers will take their cameras and crawl up their own backsides".[8]

DVD releases

The Deer Hunter has twice been released on DVD. The first 1998 issue by Universal, with no extra features and a non-anamorphic transfer, has since been discontinued. A second version, part of the "Legacy Series", was released as a two-disc set on September 6, 2005, with an anamorphic transfer of the film. The set features a cinematographer's commentary by Vilmos Zsigmond, interviews of the cast and crew, and deleted and extended scenes. The Region 2 version of The Deer Hunter, released in the UK and Japan, features a commentary track from director Michael Cimino. The film was released on HD DVD in 2006. It has since been released on the Blu-Ray format in countries other than the United States, however all versions of the film available on Blu-Ray are region free.

Trivia

  • In an interview included on the bonus disc of the two-disc DVD release, director Michael Cimino states that Robert De Niro requested a live bullet in the revolver for the scene in which he subjects John Cazale's character to an impromptu game of Russian roulette, to heighten the intensity of the situation. Cazale agreed without protest. In the director's commentary of the region 2 DVD release, Cimino points out that Cazale obsessively rechecked the gun before each take to make sure that the live round wasn't next in the chamber.
  • In the first part of the film, there is a portrait of Vladimir Vysotsky, a renown Russian songwriter
  • To render himself ghostly, Christopher Walken exclusively ate rice, bananas, and water for the week before he filmed the third act.
  • During screenings of the short version of the film, director Cimino bribed the projectionist to interrupt it, in order to obtain better reviews of the long version.[citation needed]
  • The epigraph to E. M. Corder's tie-in novelization of The Deer Hunter (1979) is from Ernest Hemingway:

    There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter.

  • All scenes involving John Cazale, who had end-stage bone cancer during the shoot, had to be filmed first. Cazale died shortly after filming wrapped. Because of his illness, the studio initially wanted to get rid of Cazale, but his real-life fiancee, Meryl Streep, and Cimino threatened to walk away if they did.

See also

Notes

External links


 
 

 

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