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Tarfumes.com - The Naked Prey - Criterion Collection

The Naked Prey -  Criterion Collection
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Manufacturer: Criterion Collection
Starring: Cornel Wilde
Directed By: Cornel Wilde
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Image Entertainment
EAN: 0715515027328
Format: Color
Label: Criterion Collection
Manufacturer: Criterion Collection
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Criterion Collection
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2008-01-15
Running Time: 96
Studio: Criterion Collection
Theatrical Release Date: 1966

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Editorial Reviews:

Glamorous leading man turned idiosyncratic auteur Cornel Wilde created a handful of gritty, violent explorations of the nature of man in the sixties and seventies, none more memorable than The Naked Prey. In the late nineteenth century, after an ivory-hunting safari offends an African tribe, the colonialists are captured and hideously tortured. Only Wilde s marksman is released, without clothes or weapons, to be hunted for sport, and he embarks on a harrowing journey through savanna and jungle and back to a primitive state. Distinguished by widescreen camerawork and unflinching savagery, The Naked Prey is both a propulsive, stripped-to-the-bone narrative and a meditation on the notion of civilization.

SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES:


New, restored high-definition digital transfer

Audio commentary by film scholar Stephen Prince

John Colter s Escape, a 1913 written record of the trapper s flight from Blackfoot Indians which was the inspiration for The Naked Prey read by actor Paul Giamatti

Original soundtrack cues created by director Cornel Wilde and ethnomusicologist Andrew Tracey, along with a written statement by Tracey on the score

Theatrical trailer

PLUS: A booklet featuring a new essay by film critic Michael Atkinson and a 1970 interview with Wilde


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: I've waited years for it!
Comment: I first saw Naked Prey when it was initially released to the theaters, but not since. That is, until I discovered Criterion had released a dvd. I ran up the isle to grab it. What a film! Teriffic acting, photography, music. And a story line that can't be beat.

It had been over forty years since my first and only viewing, yet I retained the images and initial emotions all these years.

Get a copy of the Naked Prey. It is unforgetable.



Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Naked excellence!
Comment: This is a movie with little dialogue and lots of acting. The commentary is also very good.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Cornel Wilde is `Man,' and Man is The Naked Prey
Comment: `A hundred years ago, Africa was a vast, dark unknown. Only a few explorers and missionaries, the ivory hunters and the infamous slave traders risked their lives on its blood-soaked trails. Gleaming tusks were the prize and sweating slaves, sold by their own kings and chiefs in the ceaseless tribal wars or seized by slavers. The lion and the leopard hunted savagely among the huge herds of game. And man, lacking the will to understand other men, became like the beasts, and their way of life was his.'

Cornel Wilde is `Man,' and Man is The Naked Prey. How tough is Cornel Wilde? Not only could he star in a film that sees him chased across a hostile environment by murderous tribesmen but could direct it as well in a primitive location in terrible conditions while seriously ill. While not the world's greatest actor he's the right physical presence for the part: there's something primal enough about him to convince as the kind of man who, when spattered with the blood of an enemy, just rubs it in rather than brushes it off. Indeed, Wilde was even planning to make a sequel decades later while dying of cancer.

Based on John Coulter's escape from Blackfoot tribesmen during the Lewis and Clark expedition and originally intended as a Western before South African tax breaks prompted a change of locale, it's a simple story well told. Wilde is leading an ivory hunting safari that, thanks to callous employer Gert Van Der Berg, falls foul of Ken Gampu's tribesmen, who later attack them and deal out various imaginative tortures and deaths to all except Wilde, who shows no fear. Reasoning that because he looks like a lion, he deserves a lion's death, they give him a chance: stripped naked and completely unarmed, they'll give him a head start before chasing after him and killing him. Only their prey is far more resourceful than they imagine, and what was intended as a quick kill becomes a long manhunt through a savage landscape.

It's not a new story, even in 1966: the manhunt movie had been a sporadic staple since The Most Dangerous Game and the same true story it was based on had served as partial inspiration for Run of the Arrow ten years earlier while in more recent years its done service in First Blood and Apocalypto. Yet it's rarely been done this well. It's also surprisingly ahead of its time, anticipating Peckinpah in the village children play-acting each of the executions and, most surprisingly, avoiding much of the racial stereotyping of the day. The tribesmen aren't supermen - they run out of breath as well, get thirsty, argue among themselves and even want to go home. And while the tribe do delight in (probably) invented tortures, it's not without cause, and Wilde isn't that far removed from them. Allan Quatermain in all but name, the film clearly sets `Man' apart from his white business partner - he only kills for ivory, not for sport and isn't interested in going into the slave trade for easy money - and just before the attack, Wilde makes a direct link between Wilde's sense of hearing and Ken Gampu's sense of smell. Both men rely on their senses for survival, acutely aware of their surroundings in a story where it's survival not just of the fastest and the fittest but also the one who can adapt most to their environment - and their environment is not a pretty picture here. Its depiction of nature as a savage and unsentimental battlefield where its kill or be killed today seems like a pre-emptive two fingers to Terrence Malick's recent work

Pared down to the bone - there's no characterisation as such - and played in deep focus throughout, it may not be the greatest adventure film ever made, but it's a damn good one.

The extras on Criterion's DVD aren't that plentiful but are good: soundtrack cues, a reading of an account of John Coulter's real-life escape, original trailer, booklet including an interview with Wilde and a good audio commentary despite the odd mistake (The Most Dangerous Game wasn't made in 1936). The 2.35:1 widescreen transfer is especially good and, unlike the TV prints, the film is uncut.



Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: How far can You run with bare feet?
Comment: I loved this movie. It's not perfect. The scene where Wilde attacks the slavers is unrealistic Hollywood. Otherwise the film is riveting. I rather suspect the theme of being chased by savages who give you a fair start is taken directly from the account of the Mountain Man, Jim Coulter, in Yellowstone back in the early 1800's. According to Coulter, he and a friend encountered Black Foot Indians. Coulter's friend went for his weapon but was immediately pincushioned by the Indians.

Coulter, himself, was stripped naked. An arrow was shot into the distance and Coulter was told he must go to the arrow but, once he got there. the Black Foot would pursue and kill him. Coulter was a good runner but not as good as one of the Indians. Coulter managed to kill him, ran further, then dove into a river and hid underneath a beaver lodge as the pursuing Indians--having lost his trail--poked around in the lodge in case he'd hidden there. They gave up and Coulter escaped to tell his tale.

Although "Naked Prey" is Coulter's tale revisited, I'm doubtful that a naked white man, under similar circumstances, could survive in Africa. The reason is thorns. Yellowstone has few thorns. Southern Africa has plenty. One thorn in a naked foot and.....well....the rest would be history. A naked man crippled by even one thorn would be quickly finished off. It makes a good story, though.

Ron Braithwaite author of novels--"Skull Rack" and "Hummingbird God"--on the Conquest of Mexico

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Naked Prey
Comment: Gift for my guy, he loved it! The quality was amazing and well worth the wait for it.


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