The Hunting Party (1971) Review

The Hunting Party (1971)

cinema

0
(0)

My Review

Gene Hackman plays a wealthy cattle rancher whose wife is kidnapped by an outlaw and held for ransom. However, she develops feelings for her captor, which complicates matters greatly in “The Hunting Party.” Director Don Medford put together a second-rate western with poor writing, but still qualifies as passable entertainment due to fair production values and the charisma of the central cast. The barely passable script was penned by Gilbert Ralston, Arthur Gardner, and Arnold Raven.

The stars of the show are Oliver Reed as the outlaw, Candice Bergen as the kidnaped wife, and Gene Hackman receives third billing as the rancher. Hackman did not become a big star until October, 1971, with the release of “The French Connection.” All three principals were good in their respective roles. Co-stars include Simon Oakland, Ronald Howard, G. D. Spradlin, L. Q. Jones, Mitchell Ryan, Rayford Barnes, Bernard Kay, Francesca Tu, Marian Collier, Rafael Albaicin, Emilio Rodriguez, and Ralph Brown as the sheriff.

The low-budget barely watchable western “The Hunting Party” was a flop at the box office for Levy-Gardner-Laven and United Artists. Cinematographer Cecilio Paniagua did successfully capture the beautiful scenery of shooting locations in Spain on film.

Visits:684 Today: 3 Total: 870534

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.