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The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

Posted By: Someonelse
The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

The Naked Prey (1966)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | 01:35:38 | Artwork | 7,44 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: English SDH
Genre: Adventure, Drama | The Criterion Collection #415

Director: Cornel Wilde
Stars: Cornel Wilde, Gert van den Bergh, Ken Gampu

Glamorous leading man turned idiosyncratic auteur Cornel Wilde created in the sixties and seventies a handful of gritty, violent explorations of the nature of man, none more memorable than The Naked Prey. In the early nineteenth century, after an ivory-hunting safari offends an African tribe, the colonialists are captured and hideously tortured. Only Wilde’s marksman is released, without clothes or weapons, to be hunted for sport, and he embarks on a harrowing journey through savanna and jungle, back to a primitive state. Distinguished by vivid widescreen camera work and the unflinching depiction of savagery, The Naked Prey is both a propulsive, stripped-to-the-bone narrative and a meditation on the notion of civilization.


In Hollywood of recent years, “action film” has come to be synonymous with “bloated”: bloated budgets, bloated narratives, bloated special effects, and, of course, bloated egos both in front of and behind the camera. From Michael Bay's incoherent action headrushes to Gore Verbinski's screen-splitting visual overload, Hollywood action movies have stopped hitting us in the gut and settled for little more than rattling us senseless. Thus, watching something as lean, stripped down, primal, and brutally effective as Cornel Wilde's The Naked Prey is like rediscovering the wonders of purified water after years of slurping sugary soda.

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

Wilde started as an actor in the 1940s, and he graduated to leading man status in the 1950s in adventure films that took advantage of his rugged good looks and chiseled physique. Such movie stars were common and rather unremarkable in Hollywood at that time, but unlike the interchangeable he-men who populated sword-and-sandal epics and exotic action-adventures, Wilde yearned to make his own films on his own terms. Thus, he should be credited as a pioneer of sorts, an actor-turned-auteur who paved the way for the likes of Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford, Mel Gibson, and George Clooney, all leading men who mortgaged their silver-screen popularity for the opportunity to be artists behind the camera.

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

Wilde had directed several solid genre films before The Naked Prey, but it was this bare-bones survival tale that staked his claim to more than just accomplished craftsmanship. Loosely based on the actual 18th-century escape of Lewis and Clark adventurer and trapper John Colter from Blackfoot Indians, The Naked Prey shifts the setting to colonial South Africa. The exact time period, as well as the tribal identities of the Africans and the cultural heritage (not to mention the names) of the white safari hunters is left vague, which suggests that the film is more parable than historical recreation. Wilde plays a safari guide whose bullheaded client (Gert Van den Bergh) offends the tribe on whose land they are hunting elephants, which results in all of them being captured and all but Wilde being tortured and killed. Because he has earned some respect from the Africans, Wilde's character is given a chance to live: He is stripped naked and sent running into the savannah with a group of the tribe's best warriors in hot pursuit, which pretty much sums up the last hour of the film.

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

As a director, Wilde wrings significant drama and tension from this scenario in purely primal terms. That is, The Naked Prey works on the level of simple survival; there is no backstory for Wilde's character or convoluted narrative dramatics to support the action. Rather, the story hinges on the inherent dramatic intensity of the desire for survival and violence of conflict, which Wilde puts into perspective by frequently intercutting documentary footage of lions chasing down wildebeest, a snake and an iguana going head to head, and even an enormous toad eating the smaller toads around him. Wilde boils life down to a fight for survival, stripping away civility and socialized morality and exposing the raw essence of life. We don't care about Wilde's character because of his ethics or his personality, but because we recognize in him a fellow human being forced to the edge of endurance, where the only thing that matters is his life–not its quality or its details, but its very existence. (It is interesting to compare the film to Mel Gibson's Apocalypto, whose basic narrative structure is clearly taken from The Naked Prey, but then replaces the simplicity of its survival ethos with a more conventional celebration of home and family.)

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

The Naked Prey is a rough film, both aesthetically and thematically. It is also an infinitely paradoxical film. On a visual level, the editing is often coarse and rough, sometimes borderline amateurish in the way it is clearly covering up for a lack of budget and special effects; however, many of Wilde's widescreen compositions are elegant, even rapturous. Having been filmed on location in South Africa certainly contributes to the film's visual grandeur, but Wilde also proves that he has a poet's eye, such as when he uses a flowering tree branch to frame a brutal beating. There is none of the romanticized cheapness that is the hallmark of so many low-budget Hollywood forays into the African bush. Rather, Wilde sees the harshness of nature for what it is, reveling in both its violence and its primal splendor.

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

Ideologically, the film certainly rubs against political correctness in its depiction of a seemingly righteous white man outmaneuvering “uncivilized” African warriors, some of whom appear to be ripped right out of Hollywood's dated “dark continent” playbook. Look closer, though, and you'll realize The Naked Prey does not have any real heroes or villains, with the exception of Van den Bergh's spoiled and racist aristocrat. We actually know less about Wilde's character than we do about the African tribesmen, who are given at least as much, if not more, screen time and come across as fully rounded humans with a wide range of emotions. That the story ends on a note of mutual admiration may play as a cop-out to some, but the film clearly earns it.

The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

The only time The Naked Prey sinks anywhere close to simplified nightmares about dark-skinned natives is during the torture sequence in which the white safari hunters are humiliated, beaten, and, in one instance, encased in mud and slowly roasted over an open fire. There is something almost too neat and familiar about the whole scenario, and it feels like it was cooked up on a Hollywood backlot, rather than emerging from the ethnographic detail that largely defines the rest of the film. In both the torture sequence and in the various battles that ensue, the film's violence is harsh and potent, especially for the mid-1960s, but it is evenly spread across the racial spectrum, which reinforces Wilde's underlying theme about both the inherent savagery of the human animal and the beauty of his insatiable desire to survive.
James Kendrick, QNetwork
The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]
The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]

Special Features:
- New, restored high-definition digital transfer
- Audio commentary by film scholar Stephen Prince
- “John Colter’s Escape,” a 1913 written record of the trapper’s flight from Blackfoot Indians—which was the inspiration for The Naked Prey—read by actor Paul Giamatti
- Original soundtrack cues created by director Cornel Wilde and ethnomusicologist Andrew Tracey, along with a written statement by Tracey on the score
- Theatrical trailer
- A booklet featuring a new essay by film critic Michael Atkinson and a 1970 interview with Wilde
The Naked Prey (1966) [The Criterion Collection #415] [ReUp]
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