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Hunter Becomes Hunted: The Most Dangerous Game (1932)

Written by Kami at Classic Couple

The Three Stooges

What do you do when you’re making King Kong and you’ve got time on your hands? You film King Kong during the day and you make another movie at night.


That’s just what King Kong (1933) directors Ernest B. Schoedsack and Merian C. Cooper did. Using the same King Kong jungle sets, Schoedsack and Cooper shot The Most Dangerous Game (1932) as an adaptation of the 1924 short story of the same name.

Along with the jungle sets, they used King Kong leads Fay Wray and Robert Armstrong in two of the lead roles in the story of a famous big game hunter who finds himself shipwrecked on the island of another hunter. Wray and Armstrong play brother Martin and sister Eve who are among a party shipwrecked on the island.


Joel McCrea plays Bob a renowned big game hunter and author whose ship sinks off a small island. Bob as sole survivor makes his way across the island to a castle seeking refuge. There he is greeted by master of the castle Count Zaroff played by Leslie Banks.





Note before reading on—contains plot spoilers.


Zaroff offers Bob his hospitality and soon he is introduced to Martin and Eve who explain they were also recently shipwrecked along with two sailors in their party. When an opportunity arises to speak privately with Bob, Eve conveys her suspicions that all is not right. It appears that after being given a tour of the Count’s mysterious locked trophy room, the two sailors went out hunting but have not returned.


As Count Zaroff regales the group with his hunting exploits he reveals an insatiable need to hunt more and more challenging game. He claims he was bored until he discovered “the most dangerous game” on his island.

It does not take long before Eve and Bob discover exactly what the most dangerous game is—humans, who the Count hunts on the island, hanging their heads in his trophy room. They find themselves the prey in a contest to see if they can survive the night and thereby win their freedom and safe passage off the island.


To read the rest of Kami's review, click here!

Then, head over to TheFilmDetective.tv to see Fay Wray and Joel McCrea's perilous journey through the jungle in "The Most Dangerous Game" (1932)!

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