Sneha Girap (Editor)

Chasing the Deer

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron6
6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Graham Holloway

Producer
  
Language
  
English

5.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
History, War

Duration
  

Country
  
United Kingdom

Chasing the Deer movie poster

Writer
  
Bob Carruthers
,
Steve Gillham

Release date
  
16 December 1994

Initial release
  
December 16, 1994 (United Kingdom)

Screenplay
  
Bob Carruthers, Steve Gillham, Jerome Vincent

Cast
  
(Maj Elliot), (Tullibardine), (Angus Cameron), (Shonagh),
Mathew Zajac
(Alistair Campbell)

Similar movies
  
Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948)

Chasing the Deer (later re-titled Culloden 1746) is a 1994 British war film directed by Graham Holloway and starring Brian Blessed, Lewis Rae, Iain Cuthbertson, Fish and Mathew Zajac. It depicts the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion, in which Bonnie Prince Charlie landed in Scotland, trying to claim the British throne.

Contents

Chasing the Deer Chasing The Deer VHS 1994 Brian Blessed Iain Cuthbertson Jake

The title metaphorically alludes to the Jacobites as the quarry in a deer hunt. The phrase "a-chasing the deer" appears in the refrain of the romantic Scottish poem by Robert Burns, My Heart's in the Highlands (1789).

Chasing the Deer Amazoncom Chasing the Deer The Tragedy of Culloden Moor Brian

Plot

In the time leading up to Jacobite rising of 1745, a young Highlander called Euan (Lewis Rae) and his father Alistair are press-ganged into the Jacobite army to fight for the Young Pretender, Bonnie Prince Charlie.

Chasing the Deer CULLODEN 1994 FILM WITH MUSIC BY RUNRIG BRIAN BLESSED IAN

Euan's group of warriors are captured by Hanoverian loyalist troops and he is forced to join the Duke of Cumberland's army as a drummer for the British. Major Elliot (Brian Blessed), a Hanoverian officer who has lost his own son, forms a protective relationship with Euan. Father and son end up fighting on opposing sides at Culloden. Euan is killed, and Alistair runs to his aid. Seeing a Jacobite soldier standing over the body of his favourite soldier, Major Elliot kills Alistair.

Production

Chasing the Deer Chasing the Deer YouTube

The budget for Chasing the Deer was limited, and in order to raise money for the production, the filmmakers crowdfunded the film by inviting individuals to invest £1000 each in the project. In return for their contributions, the 374 investors were allowed to appear in the film as extras.

For the battle scenes, notably the depiction of the Battle of Culloden, the filmmakers engaged a Scottish battle reenactment group, the Scottish Clan Battle Society, to perform historical combat. The group also performed in other Scottish historical films such as Highlander (1985) and Braveheart (1995).

Chasing The Deer was filmed on location in Scotland, including Culloden, Fort George, Kingussie, Ruthven Barracks, and the Cairngorm mountains. Some internal sequences were filmed in England at Hagley Hall in Worcestershire, and battle scenes at the nearby Wychbury Hill.

Music

The film soundtrack includes music by the Scottish celtic rock group Runrig and the Marillion singer-songwriter Fish, and features the song "Battle Lines by the English rock musician John Wetton.

Cast

  • Brian Blessed as Major Elliot
  • Iain Cuthbertson as Tullibardine
  • Matthew Zajac (as Mathew Zajac) as Alistair Campbell
  • Fish as Angus Cameron
  • Brian Donald as Old Campbell
  • Sandy Welch as Old Cameron
  • Peter Gordon as McKinnon
  • Carolyn Konrad as Morag
  • Lynn Ferguson as Shonagh
  • Lewis Rae as Euan
  • Simon Kirk as Sgt. Kirk
  • Andy McCullogh as Sgt. Monroe
  • Callum McDougal as a Crofter
  • Steven Cooper as a Crofter
  • Michael Leighton as O'Sullivan
  • Dominique Carrara as Charles Edward Stuart
  • Robert McIntosh as McDonald of Sleat
  • Reception

    Murray Pittock's critical assessment of Chasing the Deer considered that Holloway's production was influenced by Peter Watkins's 1964 film Culloden in its portrayal of the conflict as a clash between haphazard, tribal Jacobite warriors and the forces of modernity. However, Time Out contrasted Chasing the Deer unfavourably with Watkins's film for its small cast and over-reliance on a smoke machine, but singled out Brian Blessed's performance for praise. Writing in the Glasgow Herald, William Russel found the script and acting style clumsy and the cinematography unimaginative and restricted. However, he also praised Brian Blessed's portrayal of Major Elliot, the choreography of the battle scenes and the choice of "stunningly beautiful" Highland locations. Empire awarded the film two stars out of five, citing the low-budget production values and the use of "Tourist Board footage of lush countryside and antlered animals in order to fill gaping holes in the plot." Chasing the Deer has been credited with helping to raise cultural awareness of the historical events at Culloden.

    Chasing the Deer received 5.4 stars out of 10 on IMDB.

    References

    Chasing the Deer Wikipedia
    Chasing the Deer IMDb Chasing the Deer themoviedb.org


    Similar Topics