The Hunting Party Movie Review
The Hunting Party Review

"The Hunting Party" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Richard ShepardProducer : Bill Block,Paul Hanson,Adam Merims
Screenwiter : Richard Shepard
Starring : Richard Gere,Terrence Howard,Jesse Eisenberg,James Brolin
Despite the Western genre's resurgence -- and Hollywood's willingness to remake
already acceptable examples of the classic format -- Richard Shepard's The
Hunting Party has nothing to do with Don Medford's smoldering
love-triangle-on-the-pioneer-trail from 1971 that carries the same name.
Instead of a brilliant stand-off between Gene Hackman and Oliver Reed, we get
the versatile Terrence Howard and a dependable (but unremarkable) Richard Gere
sprinting through a ripped-from-the-headlines satire of our nation's ongoing
military turmoil overseas.
Simon Hunt (Gere) has had enough. After years spent covering the atrocities of
war with fearless cameraman Duck (Howard) in tow, Hunt lets his wearied
emotions get the better of him during a live segment. His meltdown doesn’t
approach Howard Beale's "mad as hell" level, but it's enough to pull the plug
on Hunt's career for the time being.
Flash forward a few years. Duck, who narrates the opening salvos of this hectic
Party, has accepted a cushy gig at the network. He returns to Bosnia to film a
puff-piece on a fruitless peace treaty and stumbles across Hunt -- a desperate
freelancer who is hungry for a story big enough to propel him back to the realm
of credibility. And Hunt thinks he has one. Through a tip, he has located The
Fox (Ljubomir Kerekes), Bosnia's chief war criminal and the source of a $5
million bounty. Hunt wants to capture him, and he convinces Duck to come along
for the ride.
Shepard's screenplay, based on an article that ran in Esquire magazine,
constructs a fancy lead for what eventually becomes a routine action thriller
with a fair share of dark comedy sprinkled in to offset the gloom. Those who
caught Shepard's The Matador will recognize his stylish visual approach, though
it has lost that sheen of originality. The performances are competent, with
Gere holding a note of desperation longer than is necessary.
The Beale comparison makes a bit of sense as Party plays out, though. Where
Sidney Lumet and Paddy Chayefsky used a crumbling network anchor to expose
hypocrisies behind the scenes at our television stations, Shepard tries to use
a news crew planted behind enemy lines to tear down the inadequacies of the
United Nations and the Bush administration, and to poke fingers at the
ever-expanding chasm between reporting the news and creating it.
Party wants to cover a lot of ground, but shortchanges most of it. We should
have seen it coming. A sarcastic tag preludes the picture claiming that only
the most ridiculous parts of this story are true. Shepard must be explaining
away his incomplete ending, which settles a personal grudge for one of the
film's protagonists but doesn't place a single patch on the hopelessly broken
international political structure.
My fro will stop the war.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





