Open Season

Open Season(1974)

R
08/01/1974 (US)Action, Drama, Thriller1h 45m
5.2

"Meet Ken, Gregg and Art. Two weeks each year they get away... with Everything!"

Overview

Three Vietnam vets have become so conditioned to violence that they have developed psychotic tendencies. They kidnap people, brutalize them, then turn them loose and hunt them like animals. However the father of one of their earlier victims is plotting a vicious revenge against them.

Peter Collinson

Director

Liz Charles-Williams

Writer

José Antonio Sáinz de Vicuña

Writer

Where to Watch

Rent

Fandango At Home

Buy

Fandango At Home

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

Open Season (1974) - Trailer HD 1080p

Open Season (1974) - Trailer HD 1080p

Trailer

Open Season

Open Season

Featurette

Scene from 'Open Season'

Scene from 'Open Season'

Clip

(Open Season 1974) John Howard - Casting Shadows

(Open Season 1974) John Howard - Casting Shadows

Clip

Social

M
A review by MOVIESandMANIA

Written on March 26, 2021

Three veterans of the Vietnam War, Ken, Greg and Art, played by Fonda, Law and Lynch respectively, have struggled to reintegrate back into society after their experiences and though furnished with the trappings of middle-class family life, they take an annual trip into the woods to take out their aggression on the local wildlife.

Tiring of their haul of deer and squirrels, they turn their attention to human prey, specifically a holidaying couple (actually having an affair), young Nancy (Cornelia Sharpe) and not-so-young Martin (Alberto de Mendoza, best remembered from _Horror Express_).

What follows is a decidedly brutal game of cat and mouse, complete with rape, beatings, humiliation and torture. Taking its cue from as far back as _The Most Dangerous Game_ (1932), this is far more than a traditional 'hunting humans' suspense tale, featuring relentlessly unhinged performances from the three 'bad guys' and an oddly unique couple as the victims.

The real hook to the film is the direction by Collinson, more famous as the director of the decidedly more respectable The Italian Job, throwing the viewer right into the midst of the action, showing much of the action from the perspective of the hunted, meaning that the traps and mistreatment come as both a complete surprise and are therefore even more shocking. Freeze-frames mid-action also adds to the jarring, unusual set-up.

Fonda delivers an utterly gripping performance, his 'casual evil' a constant threat. Law's clean-cut accomplice a massive departure from his other roles (the likes of _Danger Diabolik!_ and _Barbarella_) and future genre star (_God Told Me To_, _Cut and Run_) Richard Lynch's nerdy runt of the litter, are both excellent foils. Somewhat sandwiched in tone and theme between Deliverance and Rituals, the film delivers more evil sadism than both combined.

Daz Lawrence, MOVIES and MANIA