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The Last Hunt

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2K
YOUR RATING
The Last Hunt (1956)
In 1883 South Dakota, two buffalo hunters start a personal feud over a captured squaw and a stand-off with a Dakota raiding party over some stolen horses.
Play trailer3:45
1 Video
37 Photos
DramaWestern

In 1883 South Dakota, two buffalo hunters start a personal feud over a captured squaw and a stand-off with a Dakota raiding party over some stolen horses.In 1883 South Dakota, two buffalo hunters start a personal feud over a captured squaw and a stand-off with a Dakota raiding party over some stolen horses.In 1883 South Dakota, two buffalo hunters start a personal feud over a captured squaw and a stand-off with a Dakota raiding party over some stolen horses.

  • Director
    • Richard Brooks
  • Writers
    • Richard Brooks
    • Milton Lott
  • Stars
    • Robert Taylor
    • Stewart Granger
    • Lloyd Nolan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Brooks
    • Writers
      • Richard Brooks
      • Milton Lott
    • Stars
      • Robert Taylor
      • Stewart Granger
      • Lloyd Nolan
    • 45User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:45
    Official Trailer

    Photos37

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    Top cast27

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    Robert Taylor
    Robert Taylor
    • Charles Gilson
    Stewart Granger
    Stewart Granger
    • Sandy McKenzie
    Lloyd Nolan
    Lloyd Nolan
    • Woodfoot
    Debra Paget
    Debra Paget
    • Indian Girl
    Russ Tamblyn
    Russ Tamblyn
    • Jimmy O'Brien
    Constance Ford
    Constance Ford
    • Peg
    Joe De Santis
    Joe De Santis
    • Ed Black
    • (as Joe DeSantis)
    Ainslie Pryor
    Ainslie Pryor
    • First Buffalo Hunter
    Ralph Moody
    Ralph Moody
    • Indian Agent
    Fred Graham
    Fred Graham
    • Bartender
    Ed Lonehill
    Ed Lonehill
    • Spotted Hand
    Joe Balch
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Roy Barcroft
    Roy Barcroft
    • Maj. Smith
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmie Booth
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Steve Darrell
    Steve Darrell
    • Wells Fargo Man
    • (uncredited)
    Rosemary Johnston
    • Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Casey MacGregor
    • Bit Role
    • (uncredited)
    Jerry Martin
    • Barber
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Brooks
    • Writers
      • Richard Brooks
      • Milton Lott
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    6.81.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8bastrop-1

    the last hunt 1955/56

    I had watched several days film shooting of this movie that summer,the end result was just two scenes in the movie. The location was Sylvan Lake in the Black Hills. Bring the wagon,stop the wagon etc . So this Dakota youth looked forward to seeing the movie and was not disappointed. The local buffalo herd was being culled so the shooting scenes were for real. (yes Doris, animals were hurt during filming) I think the ending was copied by Jack Nicholson in the Shining? A great western/social comment from the 50's. This should be in the same class as High Noon for real western drama or used as a social statement like Blackboard Jungle or Rebel Without A Cause was for 50's youth.
    10bux

    A mature, realistic view of the bitter end of the 'Old West.'

    Have no illusions, this IS a morality story. Granger is the troubled ex-buffalo hunter, tempted back to the plains one more time by kill-crazed Taylor. Granger can see the end is near, and feels deeply for the cost of the hunt-on the herds, the Indians and the land itself. Taylor, on the other hand admittedly equates killing buffalo, or Indians to 'being with a woman.' While Granger's role of the tortured hunter is superb, it's Taylor who steals the show, as the demented, immoral 'everyman' out for the fast buck and the goodtimes. There's not a lot of bang-bang here, but the story moves along quickly, and we are treated to a fine character performance by Nolan. The theme of this story is just as poignant today, as in the 1800s-man's relationship to the land and what's on it, and racism. Considering when this was made, the Censors must have been wringing their hankies during the scenes in the 'bawdy house', Taylor's relationship with the squaw, and much of the dialogue. Although downbeat, this is truly a great western picture.
    7claudio_carvalho

    A Gritty and Brutal Western

    In 1883, in South Dakota, the former buffalo hunter Sandy McKenzie (Stewart Granger) is tired of hunting the animals. He is approached by Charlie Gilson (Robert Taylor), a man that feels pleasure in killing buffalo and Indians, who proposes a high salary to him to hunt buffalo for him. They associate to each other and hire the skilled skinner Woodfoot (Lloyd Nolan) and the half-breed Jimmy O'Brien (Russ Tamblyn) to help them.

    When a group of Indians steal their horses, Charlie hunts them down and kills them in their camp. Charlie finds a gorgeous Indian girl (Debra Paget) with a baby boy and he brings her to his camp to be his woman. However, Sandy and she are attracted to each other but they fear Charlie. Along the days, the tension between them increases until the day Charlie kills a white buffalo that is sacred for the Indians.

    "The Last Hunt" is a gritty and brutal western in a period when the Old West is ending. Robert Taylor and Stewart Granger have great performances and Debra Paget is in top of her beauty and responsible for an increasing tension between the two lead characters.

    The cruel scenes where the buffalo are killed by marksmen are for real and part of the reduction of the herd planned by the government of USA. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "A Última Caçada" ("The Last Hunt")
    7ccbc

    Good, but could have been Great

    I saw this movie (at a drive-in with my family) about the time, or not long after, it came out. I was eleven or twelve. I remembered scenes from this flick for fifty years until seeing it again on TCM. These scenes (a frozen buffalo hide, a guy sharpening a skinning knife, the white buffalo and its hide, and the final unforgettable scene) stayed with me for years. The movie still has power, though not as much as the mental rewrite I gave it over a half century ago threading together the scenes I recalled (nothing about the sex in my pre-adolescent memory). I found the editing and cinematography pretty poor when I looked at it a second time but the story was still good. I recall my father saying after the movie, "I thought Robert Taylor said he wasn't going to do that kind of role any more." I don't know what he meant. This is perhaps Taylor's best movie. He plays a very nasty villain. And maybe that's what my father was talking about. Anyway, a curious and interesting western, exploring themes that western writers had opened up long before but were new to Hollywood. It's too bad that the lead native roles were given to Russ Tamblyn and Debra Paget, but that was 50's Hollywood. Worth watching, but mentally re-edit this film and see if you can't come up with a classic must-see.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Killing's like...err, like the only real proof you are alive.

    The Last Hunt is directed by Richard Brooks who also adapts the screenplay from the novel of the same name written by Milton Lott. It stars Robert Taylor, Stewart Granger, Debra Paget, Lloyd Nolan and Russ Tamblyn. Out of MGM it's a CinemaScope/Eastman Color production with music by Daniele Amfitheatrof and cinematography by Russell Harlan.

    Buffalo hunter Sandy McKenzie (Granger) is tired of the hunt, but after a quirk of fate leaves him financially struggling, he accepts an invitation from Charles Gilson (Taylor) to go out on another profitable hunt. But when out on the range, Charlie starts to show a sadistic streak, and after his capture of an Indian girl (Paget), the two men are driven even further apart. Something will have to give.

    It's quite often forgotten that one of the key weapons of war is food. The buffalo was an integral animal to the Native American way of life for a number of reasons, be it food, shelter, clothes or religious worth, it was an animal of great substance. So killing them off was a viable tactic for the white man during the Indian wars. The start of Richard Brooks' film tells us that in 1853 there were 60 million buffalo in the West, but within 30 years their number would be only 30 thousand...

    What unfolds in this bleak but most potent of pictures, is a tale of men emotionally battered, albeit differently, by the war, a tale tinted (tainted) by racism and ecological concerns. Essentially it's Granger's tired of it all Sandy McKenzie against Taylor's blood lust racist Charles Gilson. In the middle is Paget's Indian girl, who is courted by McKenzie but owned unwillingly by Gilson, while on the outskirts observing are the skinners, half-breed Jimmy (Tamblyn) and Woodfoot (Nolan). McKenzie can barely pull the trigger to shoot the buffalo, his inner torment etched all over his face, but Gilson can fire rapidly, a maniacal glee surfaces with each buffalo death he administers. To Gilson, one less buffalo is one less Indian, his hatred of the Indian born out when he gets chance to kill those Indians that come to be in his way.

    Is it the same kind of feeling you get around a woman?

    The screenplay positively pings with intelligence and thought for its subjects, crucial given that it is essentially an intimate five character piece. Brooks is aware that the themes dwelling in his movie need to be handled with care, to take a sledgehammer to make a point would be wrong. With the exception of Paget (not her fault as she plays it as written) he garners great performances from his cast, with Taylor and Granger excellent and proving to be good foil for each other. Taylor has Gilson as outright scary and nasty, but there is a shade of sympathy asked of us viewers for he is a troubled mind. When a rumble of thunder pierces the sky above the group's camp, Gilson thinks it's a buffalo herd in flight, off he goes frantically in search of more kills, practically frothing at the mouth. This man clearly needs help, but out there on the frontier there is no help for battle scarred minds.

    With actual footage of buffalo killings cut into the film (part of the government thinning of the herd programme), there's plenty to feel sombre about. However, there is great beauty to be found by way of Russell Harlan's photography out of Badlands National Park and Custer State Park. These lands were once home to much pain and misery, but forever beautiful they be and in Harlan's hands they offer up another reason why The Last Hunt is essential viewing for the Western fan. It's brilliant, one of the unsung classics of 50s Westerns and proof positive that Robert Taylor, when challenged to do so, could indeed act very well. 9/10

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      US government marksmen shot and killed buffalo during production as part of a scheduled herd-thinning. Close observation of the film reveals that the buffalo were shot in the head, which is why they would fall straight to the ground where they were standing.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Indian Girl: You take away our food and now you kill our religion.

    • Connections
      Featured in MGM Parade: Episode #1.20 (1956)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 19, 1956 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Die letzte Jagd
    • Filming locations
      • Badlands National Park, South Dakota, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,121,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,236
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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