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White Hunter Black Heart

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Director
  
Initial DVD release
  
September 2, 2003

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Adventure, Drama

Music director
  
Country
  
United States

White Hunter Black Heart movie poster

Release date
  
September 14, 1990 (1990-09-14)

Based on
  
Writer
  
Peter Viertel (novel), Peter Viertel (screenplay), James Bridges (screenplay), Burt Kennedy (screenplay)

Cast
  
(John Wilson), (Pete Verrill), (Miss Wilding, Wilson's Secretary), (Paul Landers),
Alun Armstrong

Similar movies
  
King Kong
,
Ed Wood
,
King Kong
,
,
Barton Fink
,
Day for Night

Tagline
  
An adventure in obsession...

White hunter black heart 1990 official trailer clint eastwood jeff fahey movie hd


White Hunter Black Heart is a 1990 American adventure drama film directed by and starring Clint Eastwood and based on the 1953 book of the same name by Peter Viertel. Viertel also co-wrote the script with James Bridges and Burt Kennedy. The film is a thinly disguised account of writer Peter Viertel's experiences while working on the classic 1951 film The African Queen, which was shot on location in Africa at a time when location shoots outside of the United States for American films were very rare. The main character, brash director John Wilson, played by Eastwood, is based on real-life director John Huston. Jeff Fahey plays Pete Verrill, a character based on Viertel. George Dzundza's character is based on African Queen producer Sam Spiegel. Marisa Berenson's character Kay Gibson and Richard Vanstone's character Phil Duncan, are based on Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart, respectively.

Contents

White Hunter Black Heart movie scenes

White hunter black heart 1990 fight scene


Plot

White Hunter Black Heart movie scenes

In the early 1950s, world-renowned film maker John Wilson (Eastwood), travels to Africa for his next film bringing with him a young writer chum named Pete Verrill (Jeff Fahey). While there, he becomes obsessed with hunting elephants while neglecting the preparations for the film. This leads to a conflict between the men on several levels, most notably over the idea of killing for sport such a grand animal. Even Wilson concedes that it is so wrong that it is not just a crime against nature, but a "sin." Yet he cannot overcome his desire to bring down a giant bull, a "tusker" with massive ivory tusks. Wilson's final realization that his is a petty, ignoble pursuit comes at a late point and with a tragic price, as the local expert guide Kivu (Boy Mathias Chuma) is killed protecting him from an elephant Wilson decides not to shoot.

Cast

White Hunter Black Heart movie scenes

  • Clint Eastwood as John Wilson
  • Jeff Fahey as Pete Verrill
  • Alun Armstrong as Ralph Lockhart
  • George Dzundza as Paul Landers
  • Charlotte Cornwell as Miss Wilding, Wilson's Secretary
  • Norman Lumsden as Butler George
  • Marisa Berenson as Kay Gibson
  • Richard Vanstone as Phil Duncan
  • Edward Tudor-Pole as Reissar, British Partner
  • Roddy Maude-Roxby as Thompson, British Partner
  • Richard Warwick as Basil Fields, British Partner
  • Boy Mathias Chuma as Kivu
  • Timothy Spall as Hodkins, Bush Pilot
  • Production

    White Hunter Black Heart wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters12479p12479

    At times, Eastwood, as the John Huston-like character of John Wilson, can be heard drawing out his vowels, speaking in Huston's distinctive style.

    The film was shot on location in Kariba, Zimbabwe and surrounds including at Lake Kariba, Victoria Falls and Hwange, over two months in the summer of 1989. Some interiors were shot in and around Pinewood Studios in England. The boat used in the film was constructed in England of glass fibre and shipped to Africa for filming. It was electrically powered, but was fitted with motors and engines by special effects expert John Evans to make the boat appear to be steam-powered. The elephant gun used in the film was a £65,000 double barrelled elephant magnum made by Holland & Holland, the gunmakers who had made the gun used by Huston when he was in Africa for The African Queen in 1951. The White Hunter Black Heart filmmakers took great care with the gun and sold it back to Holland & Holland after filming "unharmed, unscratched, unused."

    Actor Clive Mantle, who plays the racist bouncer Harry, has the distinction of being the only person to successfully beat up Clint Eastwood in a film. Mantle was roughly half Eastwood's age and reportedly had trouble keeping up with him during filming of the fight scene. Although Eastwood had suffered beatings in other films, most notably Dirty Harry, its sequel Sudden Impact and later Unforgiven, they usually involved him being outnumbered or outmatched; this was the first and only time he was defeated in a fair fight.

    Critical reception

    The film was entered into the 1990 Cannes Film Festival. The film received positive reviews with review tallying website Rotten Tomatoes reporting that 29 out of the 33 reviews they tallied were positive for a score of 88%. The consensus reads: "White Hunter Black Heart is powerful, intelligent, and subtly moving, a fascinating meditation on masculinity and the insecurities of artists."

    The film has grown significantly in critical stature, especially in light of the films Eastwood made immediately afterwards. Many of these, like White Hunter, Black Heart, turned out to be self-reflexive and self-conscious works criticizing and deconstructing Eastwood's own iconography. Jim Hoberman of The Village Voice hailed it as "Eastwood’s best work before Unforgiven...[an] underrated hall-of-mirrors movie about movie-inspired megalomania." Dave Kehr and Jonathan Rosenbaum consider it a masterpiece, with the latter pointing out the Brechtian nature of Eastwood's performance, as he never disappears into the role he is playing; instead, Eastwood is always recognizably his unique star persona while showing us what he imagines Huston (i.e. Wilson) to have been. The result is "a running commentary on his two subjects, Huston and himself—the ruminations and questions of a free man."

    Box office performance

    White Hunter Black Heart's gross theatrical earnings reached just over $2 million, well below the film's $24 million budget.

    References

    White Hunter Black Heart Wikipedia
    White Hunter Black Heart IMDb White Hunter Black Heart themoviedb.org


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