THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

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AndyDursin
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THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

#1 Post by AndyDursin »

6/10

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Coming out later this month from Kino Lorber is the final film of superstar Steve McQueen, who would pass away from cancer just a few months after the release of THE HUNTER (97 mins., 1980, PG).

A loose adaptation of the life and times of real modern-day bounty hunter Ralph “Papa” Thorson, “The Hunter” offers a quintessential McQueen role of a tough guy who will stop at nothing – including mass destruction – to bring in a variety of fugitives across the country. These include a wise young LeVar Burton and the son of hard-working restaurateurs who ends up fleeing from McQueen in a dizzying chase throughout the city of Chicago, most notably on train tracks, all backed to the jazzy strains of Michel Legrand’s score (except for said Windy City sequence, which was replaced with a rescore by a credited Charles Bernstein).

There’s some notable action set-pieces executed by McQueen and director Buzz Kulik (though reports have it the actor handled most of the film himself), plus an attempt at a dramatic undercurrent involving Papa’s younger, pregnant girlfriend (the lovely Kathryn Harrold), whose life is put in jeopardy by one of Thorson’s former subjects (Tracey Walter), who’s out for revenge.

“The Hunter” was a troubled production that was originally written by prolific TV scribes Richard Levinson and William Link (“Columbo”), then revised by Peter Hyams, who was supposed to direct. Hyams was tossed from the project though he’s still credited on the script, along with Link and Levinson’s pseudonym “Ted Leighton.”

What’s unfortunate is that McQueen and Hyams didn’t get along, since this picture cries out for an injection of cinematic style that’s nearly entirely absent from the finished product. The interior scenes look like something out of ‘70s network television, over-lit and so plainly shot that there’s little separating the movie from your average episode of “Eight is Enough.” These visuals are so dated that, just showing this picture to someone who wasn’t aware of its release date, you’d expect them to peg this as a movie from a different, earlier era altogether.

That could be a compliment for some movies, but here, “The Hunter” seems out of time in terms of its approach – making it doubly disappointing Hyams, who was coming off widescreen thrillers like “Capricorn One,” didn’t make the picture instead. Yes, some of the action sequences and stunts are still effective and reasonably well-choreographed – and there’s a fun running gag involving Papa’s terrible driving – but in order to appreciate “The Hunter” as a modest goodbye to McQueen and his storied career, one’s expectations firmly have to be in check.

Kino Lorber’s Blu-Ray offers a stellar new 4K scan of the original camera negative (1.85) that’s a major upgrade on the older Paramount master seen streaming and in Imprint’s Blu-Ray from last year. Colors and details are clearer throughout, while mono sound and a new commentary by Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson is heavy on an analysis of the superstar’s legacy.

Eric Paddon
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Re: THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

#2 Post by Eric Paddon »

I got the Imprint last year and seeing the film for the first time since the mid-80s on VHS I was struck by how it came off like a failed TV series pilot (Burton's character is practically set up as the kind of sidekick you'd see in a regular weekly series) with only the Chicago scenes and stunts legitimately cinematic. That McQueen's body was clearly already cancer-ridden at the time he did all those stunts is the one thing that makes the film truly fascinating from my standpoint (plus it shows how McQueen was prepared to put his legend status behind him had he lived and continued to act.)

Because the commentary is different from the one on Imprint's, I have to ask if these people address McQueen's Christian conversion during this period, which I felt Imprint's treated with respect. If they don't address it at all (despite the fact it was by now a big part of McQueen's life as he had made his commitment before his cancer diagnosis) that would be better than any underlying ridicule but it would still be disappointing.

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Paul MacLean
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Re: THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

#3 Post by Paul MacLean »

AndyDursin wrote: Fri Feb 03, 2023 11:36 am That could be a compliment for some movies, but here, “The Hunter” seems out of time in terms of its approach – making it doubly disappointing Hyams, who was coming off widescreen thrillers like “Capricorn One,” didn’t make the picture instead.
Had Hyams directed, we'd have likely gotten a superb Jerry Goldsmith action score out of it as well. Agreed, a missed opportunity. :(

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AndyDursin
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Re: THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

#4 Post by AndyDursin »

That too. Couldn't help but think of that also!

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AndyDursin
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Re: THE HUNTER (1980) - Andy's Kino Lorber Blu-Ray Review

#5 Post by AndyDursin »

Eric Paddon wrote: Fri Feb 03, 2023 3:55 pm I got the Imprint last year and seeing the film for the first time since the mid-80s on VHS I was struck by how it came off like a failed TV series pilot (Burton's character is practically set up as the kind of sidekick you'd see in a regular weekly series) with only the Chicago scenes and stunts legitimately cinematic. That McQueen's body was clearly already cancer-ridden at the time he did all those stunts is the one thing that makes the film truly fascinating from my standpoint (plus it shows how McQueen was prepared to put his legend status behind him had he lived and continued to act.)

Because the commentary is different from the one on Imprint's, I have to ask if these people address McQueen's Christian conversion during this period, which I felt Imprint's treated with respect. If they don't address it at all (despite the fact it was by now a big part of McQueen's life as he had made his commitment before his cancer diagnosis) that would be better than any underlying ridicule but it would still be disappointing.
Agreed on all counts Eric. All the interior work is just so shoddy, the budget had to have been small on this film outside McQueen's salary.

I only sampled the commentary here and there. From what I did hear, I was hoping for more background information on the movie, in fact over the end credits Steve Mitchell was confounded by the Charles Bernstein credit (he says something like "oh I guess there's some of his music in this after all") so I don't know how much research they actually did.

I do think the transfer is really good though, it's a brand new master, and if you get it cheap during a sale, I'd say it's worth it even if you have the Imprint disc...though this isn't kind of movie that's worth owning 2 copies of!

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