The Night of the Hunter Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Night of the Hunter is a 1955 movie directed by Charles Laughton and staring Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish, James Gleason, Evelyn Varden, Peter Graves, Don Beddoe, Billy Chapin, Sally Jane Bruce and Gloria Castillo.Night of the Hunter was adapted by James Agee and Charles Laughton (uncredited) from the novel of the same name by Davis Grubb.
It has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.
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2 Response 3 Influence and References 4 Remake 5 Quotes |
The film is set in the midwestern United States (the Ohio River is mentioned as being fairly close by); the era is never explicity stated, but seems to be during the Great Depression.
Mitchum portrays Harry Powell--one of his hands tattooed with "LOVE" on its knuckes, the other tattooed "HATE"--who shares a prison cell with Ben Harper (Graves). Harper is sentenced to hang for his part in a robbery, but hid the money from the robbery, and trusted his children John (Chapin) and Pearl (Bruce)--about ten and five years old, respectively--with the money's location.
Upon his release from prison, Powell masquerades as a preacher. He woos and marries Harper's widow, Willa (Winters) in order to obtain the robbery money, and eventually kills her. A famed scene shows the dead Willa, seated in a Model T at the bottom of a river.
The children--especially John--resist Powell, and find sanctuary with Rachel Cooper (Gish).
Upon its release, Night of the Hunter was not a success with either audiences or critics. This response is probably a reason that the film was the only one Laughton ever directed.
Laughton drew heavily on the harsh, angular look of 1920's expresionist films, such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and some sequences are very dreamlike.
Stanley Cortez' striking cinematography has been noted and imitated, and Mitchum's chilling and sinister performance has been especailly praised.
Despite its initial lack of success, Night of the Hunter later found a cult following, and has since been praised as a masterpiece, and one of the finest of films noir.
Roger Ebert has written of the film, "It is one of the most frightening of movies, with one of the most unforgettable of villains, and on both of those scores it holds up ... well after four decades (.)" [1]
There was a 1991 made for television version of Night of The Hunter, staring Richard Chamberlin as Powell.Plot Overview
Response
Influence and References
Remake
