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The Most Dangerous Game ()


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A psychotic big game hunter deliberately strands a luxury yacht on a remote island, where he begins to hunt its passengers for sport.

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Cast verified as complete

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Bob
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Eve
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Martin
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Count Zaroff
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Ivan
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Tartar (as Steve Clemento)
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Captain (as William Davidson)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian ...
Tartar Servant (as Dutch Hendrian)
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
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First Mate on Yacht (uncredited)
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Passenger on Yacht (uncredited)
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Bill - Owner of Yacht (uncredited)
Wesley Hopper ...
Rainsford in long shot arrriving at Island (uncredited)
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'Doc' - Passenger on Yacht (uncredited)
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Passenger on Yacht (uncredited)

Directed by

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Irving Pichel
Ernest B. Schoedsack

Written by

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James Ashmore Creelman ... (screen play)
 
Richard Connell ... (from the O.Henry prize winning collection story by)

Produced by

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Merian C. Cooper ... associate producer
Ernest B. Schoedsack ... A Cooper and Schoedsack Production
David O. Selznick ... executive producer

Music by

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Max Steiner

Cinematography by

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Henry W. Gerrard ... (photographed by) (as Henry Gerrard)

Editing by

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Archie Marshek ... (as Archie F. Marshek)

Art Direction by

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Carroll Clark

Set Decoration by

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Thomas Little ... (uncredited)

Costume Design by

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Walter Plunkett ... (uncredited)

Makeup Department

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Wally Westmore ... makeup artist (uncredited)

Art Department

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John Cerisoli ... special props (uncredited)
Byron L. Crabbe ... art department technician (uncredited)
Marcel Delgado ... special props (uncredited)
Mario Larrinaga ... art department technician (uncredited)
Steve Rez ... paint boss (uncredited)

Sound Department

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Clem Portman ... recorded by
Murray Spivack ... sound effects (uncredited)

Special Effects by

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Marcel Delgado ... special properties (uncredited)
Lloyd Knechtel ... photographic effects (uncredited)
Harry Redmond Jr. ... special effects (uncredited)
Harry Redmond Sr. ... special effects (uncredited)

Visual Effects by

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Linwood G. Dunn ... optical effects (uncredited)
Orville Goldner ... miniatures (uncredited)
Donald Jahraus ... miniatures (uncredited)
Bud Thackery ... process photography (uncredited)
Vernon L. Walker ... photographic effects (uncredited)

Stunts

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Buster Crabbe ... stunt double: Joel McCrea (uncredited)

Camera and Electrical Department

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Willard Barth ... assistant camera (uncredited)
Robert De Grasse ... camera operator (uncredited)
Gaston Longet ... still photographer (uncredited)

Music Department

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Norma Drury ... musician: piano (uncredited)
Emil Gerstenberger ... orchestrator (uncredited)
Bernhard Kaun ... orchestrator (uncredited)
Crew verified as complete

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

When legendary hunter Bob Rainsford is shipwrecked on the perilous reefs surrounding a mysterious island, he finds himself the guest of the reclusive and eccentric Count Zaroff. While he is very gracious at first, Zaroff eventually forces Rainsford and two other shipwreck survivors, brother and sister Eve and Martin Towbridge, to participate in a sadistic game of cat and mouse in which they are the prey and he is the hunter. Written by yusufpiskin

Plot Keywords
Taglines "The Finest Specimen I Ever Killed" See more »
Genres
Parents Guide View content advisory »
Certification

Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • Hounds of Zaroff (United Kingdom)
  • Les Chasses du comte Zaroff (France)
  • La Chasse du comte Zaroff (France)
  • Graf Zaroff - Genie des Bösen (Germany)
  • El malvado Zaroff (Spain)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 63 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Box Office

Budget $218,869 (estimated)

Did You Know?

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Trivia The trophy room scenes were much longer in the preview version of 78 minutes; there were more heads in jars. There was also an emaciated sailor, stuffed and mounted next to a tree where he was impaled by Zaroff's arrow, and another full-body figure stuffed, with the bodies of two of the hunting dogs mounted in a death grip. Preview audiences cringed and shuddered at the head in the bottle and the mounted heads, but when they saw the mounted figures and heard Zaroff's dialog describing in detail how each man had died, they began heading for the exit - so these shots disappeared. See more »
Goofs The island is described by Rainsford as "small as a deer park," but it contains a dramatic waterfall. Such a fall would have to have been fed by a large lake on a much larger island to flow at such a high volume. See more »
Movie Connections Edited from Bird of Paradise (1932). See more »
Soundtracks A Moment in the Dark See more »
Quotes 'Doc' - Passenger on Yacht: I was thinking of the inconsistency of civilization. The beast of the jungle, killing just for his existence, is called savage. The man, killing just for sport, is called civilized... It's a bit contradictory, isn't it?
Bob: Now just a minute... What makes you think it isn't just as much sport for the animal, as it is for the man? Now take that fellow right there, for instance. There never was a time when he couldn't have gotten away, but he didn't want to. He got interested in hunting me. He didn't hate me for stalking him, anymore than I hated him for trying to charge me. As a matter of fact, we admired each other.
'Doc' - Passenger on Yacht: Perhaps, but would you change places with the tiger?
Bob: Well... not now.
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