
Since Sunday is a day of rest for a lot of people, I present #SundayShorts, a weekly mini review of a movie I’ve recently watched.
Jack Mason (Ice-T) is a homeless man who’s having a very bad day. His dog and best friend both die so he’s ready to give up on life. Just in the nick of time, a kind gentleman named Walter Cole (Charles S. Dutton), who works at the 7th Street mission, shows up, saves his life, and tells him about a potential job opportunity, even giving Jack his partner’s business card. The job would consist of helping out a group of hunters as a survival guide. Soon, Jack is meeting with rich businessman Thomas Burns (Rutger Hauer), who tells him all about the responsibilities of the job and hires him for the position. It looks like things are finally turning Jack’s way as he finds himself on a charter flight out into the mountains, where the hunters are waiting. The night he arrives, they have a huge feast as he gets to know the guys. It’s a strange lot, but hey, he’s got food in his belly and money in his pocket, so he can put up with some odd behavior for a few days. This very short period of happiness turns out to be fool’s gold as Jack is roused from his sleep early the next morning and told to run. They’re going to be playing a game, and the rules are simple… kill or be killed!
SURVIVING THE GAME was released to theaters on April 15th, 1994, when I was 20 years old. As one of Rutger Hauer’s biggest fans, I went to see it in the movie theater of course. As a fan of B-movies filled with action and violence, I had a good time with it. A big part of that fun came from it’s cast of interesting actors. I’d watch Hauer in any role, and I pretty much have. There’s not a lot asked of him in SURVIVING THE GAME in terms of heavy lifting, but I still enjoy watching him on screen. He looks pretty cool riding his motorcycle with his big goatee and ponytail. I just like Ice-T. There’s something I’ve always found appealing about him on screen, and the same can be said here. Charles S. Dutton is so capable of projecting good on screen. The fact that his character is working at a charity mission as a front to set up homeless men to be hunted and killed was a nice bit of casting. And finally, with other actors like Gary Busey, F. Murray Abraham and John C. McGinley playing the hunters, you just know you’re in for an over-the-top, scenery chewing good time. I also want to shout out one particularly disturbing and graphic scene that involves Charles S. Dutton and a blown up 4-wheeler. It’s the one scene from the film that I’ve remembered ever since saw it that first time at the theater.
Five Fast Facts:
- SURVIVING THE GAME was released about eight months after John Woo’s HARD TARGET starring Jean-Claude Van Damme. Both films are re-tellings of THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME. Woo’s higher budgeted film did much better at the box office.
- It was Rutger Hauer’s idea that his character rides a motorcycle rather than a 4-wheeler, like the other hunters in the film. He felt the bike looked like an iron horse, giving him the appearance of a warrior knight!
- There’s not a single female character in the film.
- Near the end of the movie, there’s a shot of a cityscape with a caption on the screen that reads “Three Days Later in Seattle.” The cityscape is actually that of Philadelphia.
- Prior to directing his own films, director Ernest R. Dickerson had been the cinematographer for the Spike Lee joints SHE’S GOTTA HAVE IT, SCHOOL DAZE, DO THE RIGHT THING, MO’ BETTER BLUES, JUNGLE FEVER, and MALCOLM X.
Like our host-and-author, I also enjoyed this movie and was reminded that Ice T was also in TRESPASS (1992) directed by Walter Hill. The character of “Walter One” in ALIEN: COVENANT (2017) is named after Walter Hill. Sorry, I got off course there! Well, I like Ice T, too. I consider him the “Charles Barkley” of acting, wherein nobody dislikes him and everybody likes him and thinks he is cool/funny. He’s been in over 500 episodes of Dick Wolf’s “Law & Order: SVU” from 2000 through now. His Twitter is also hilarious, @FINALLEVEL.
Also, strongly enjoyed John Woo’s “HARD TARGET” (1993), and the ‘hair extension’ JCVD. That was a thing in the early ’90s, first actor that I knowingly saw with hair extensions was Chuck Norris in “THE HITMAN” (1991) and of course MTV hair metal bands pioneered it, for guys, anyway. My point is, I don’t care about Ice T’s hair extensions, they look cool when he is running for his life and jumping out of trees.
Also, that “not a single female character” is also true in source material Richard Connell’s “Most Dangerous Game” (1924) short story. And Rutger Hauer’s physiognomy has always seemed a little ‘Satanic’ so he is great in roles like this, “The Hitcher”, Roy Batty in “Blade Runner”, etc.
Brad, your reviews continue to be enjoyable and take me back to less-complicated times, of escapism and fun entertainment. You are humble about the effort required, I won’t belabor it but just please know that it is appreciated!
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As you know, John C, my favorite movie of all time was directed by Walter Hill, HARD TIMES. As such I’m a big fan of TRESPASS. Casts like TRESPASS and SURVIVING THE GAME are what truly bring me joy. Those years of 1984 – 1999 created the movie lover I am today and most of my favorites come prior to 2000.
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