THE MOST
DANGEROUS GAME
Directed by: Irving Pichel &
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Written by: James Ashmore Creelman
Internet
Movie
Database Entry for full details
GRADE: C
1932.
Boy, Criterion’s really scraping the bottom of the barrel with this one, eh? The Most Dangerous Game might
be fun to catch on television in the wee small hours of the morning,
and it may be a head above its now forgotten B-movie contemporaries,
but any case for it as a cinematic touchstone—and isn't that what
we expect movies released by Criterion to be?—would be, uh,
spurious, at best.
Rainsford, played by a young Joel McCrea, is a famous big game hunter
and a writer of adventure-memoirs who finds himself stranded on a
mysterious island after being the sole survivor of a suspicious
shipwreck. Thought to be uninhabited, the island is in fact home to
Count Zarloff, a Cossack who successfully fled the Revolution with his
fortune in tact, and his macabre retinue. Zarloff, too, it turns out,
is a passionate hunter, but he has an appetite for the biggest, most
dangerous game of them all—Joel McCrea.
It’s a potent, oft-worked premise, but the filmmakers don't really take it anywhere. Is The Most Dangerous Game
an animal rights polemic that deglamorizes sport-hunting by turning the
tables? Or is it a subversive socialist allegory for the barbarity of
the ruling class? At only a little more than sixty minutes, it’s
over too quickly to find out. The film does have its moments—a
gruesome collection of “trophies”, some creepy close-ups
and a ravishing final shot—but doesn't nearly every movie have
something nice to be said of it when one tries hard enough? (And Lord,
Criterion, I'm trying!)
The Most Dangerous Game's historical significance is that it was
made at the same time, and by the same people, Merian Cooper and Ernest
Schoesdsack, who brought us King Kong, using many of the same sets, crew and actors—including Fay Wray. But in relation to its sister film, The Most Dangerous Game
is like a turkey soup made from the remnants of a Thanksgiving dinner.
As Wray runs for her life through the jungle from Zarloff the mad
hunter, I found myself wondering: where’s Kong when you need him?
--
Henry Stewart
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