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NEW Night Of The Hunter (1955) (DVD)
 
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NEW Night Of The Hunter (1955) (DVD)

DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (98 customer reviews)

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Most helpful customer reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Don't he never sleep? Feb 22 2007
By E. A Solinas HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
The best kind of horror comes not from monsters or ghosts, but from other human beings. "Cape Fear," "Heavenly Creatures," and other such movies are brilliant examples of this.

But one of the most compelling examples is "Night of the Hunter," a haunting movie that slowly descends into an exquisitely-filmed, brilliantly-acted nightmare about a malign preacher and the two children who are trying to escape. Like an old fairy tale, it's full of terror, magic, beauty and darkness.

Murderous preacher Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum) is arrested for car theft, since the police don't know that his hatred of women has led him to repeated murder. He shares a prison cell with bank robber Ben Harper (Peter Graves), who stole ten thousand dollars. Powell tries to coax the location of the money from Harper, but the thief takes it to his grave. Only his son John (Billy Chapin) knows its location.

Upon his release, Powell arrives in Harper's town, claiming that he wants to "bring this small comfort to [Ben's] loved ones." Everyone is taken in by him, including his new wife -- Ben's gullible widow, Willa (Shelley Winters). When she vanishes, John and his little sister Pearl (Sally Jane Bruce) must escape their evil stepfather -- even though he's determined to hunt them down and find the money.

When it was first released, "Night of the Hunter" flopped completely. Not very surprising -- the 1950s audiences weren't ready for the unconventional villains, rich symbolism, or the fact that an actor had dared to stray into a director's chair. Fortunately, it lived on as a cult film, and is now regarded as a classic.

It's especially sad that Laughton never directed again, because this is simply astonishing. It feels like a fairy tale, with Powell as the wicked witch, and the children as the protected innocents who are helped by a "fairy godmother." Laughton also loads it down with sexual and religious symbolism -- the LOVE and HATE tattoos, the switchblade, the eerie sacrifice scene.

Best of all is the cinematography. Beauty and horror are inextricably tied together: the dead Willa with "her hair waving soft and lazy like meadow grass under flood water," or the little river animals watching the children escape under a starlit sky. But there are also moments of pure terror, such as the preacher's shadow falling over the kids, or calling out as they're hiding, "I'm out of patience, children. I'm coming to find you now..."

Robert Mitchum played another evil stalker several years later in the superb "Cape Fear," but this performance is even better. His Powell is a seething mass of murderous fervour and sexual hatred -- his intense eyes are enough to give you goosebumps.

He's also backed by some excellent performances -- Chapin is amazing as the little boy determined to obey his father and somehow stop Powell. Bruce and Winters turn in some solid performances, and veteran Lillian Gish has a good supporting role as the kindly Rachel.

As chilling and compelling as when it was first released, "Night of the Hunter" is a vibrant, primal experience, and nobody has quite come close to what it portrays.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Love hate, good evil May 1 2011
By E. A Solinas HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
The best kind of horror comes not from monsters or ghosts, but from other human beings. "Cape Fear," "Heavenly Creatures," and other such movies are brilliant examples of this.

But one of the most compelling examples is "Night of the Hunter," a haunting movie that slowly descends into an exquisitely-filmed, brilliantly-acted nightmare about a malign preacher and the two children who are trying to escape. Like an old fairy tale, it's full of terror, magic, beauty and darkness.

Murderous preacher Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum) is arrested for car theft, since the police don't know that his hatred of women has led him to repeated murder. He shares a prison cell with bank robber Ben Harper (Peter Graves), who stole ten thousand dollars. Powell tries to coax the location of the money from Harper, but the thief takes it to his grave. Only his son John (Billy Chapin) knows its location.

Upon his release, Powell arrives in Harper's town, claiming that he wants to "bring this small comfort to [Ben's] loved ones." Everyone is taken in by him, including his new wife -- Ben's gullible widow, Willa (Shelley Winters). When she vanishes, John and his little sister Pearl (Sally Jane Bruce) must escape their evil stepfather -- even though he's determined to hunt them down and find the money.

When it was first released, "Night of the Hunter" flopped completely. Not very surprising -- the 1950s audiences weren't ready for the unconventional villains, rich symbolism, or the fact that an actor had dared to stray into a director's chair. Fortunately, it lived on as a cult film, and is now regarded as a classic.

It's especially sad that Laughton never directed again, because this is simply astonishing. It feels like a fairy tale, with Powell as the wicked witch, and the children as the protected innocents who are helped by a "fairy godmother." Laughton also loads it down with sexual and religious symbolism -- the LOVE and HATE tattoos, the switchblade, the eerie sacrifice scene.

Best of all is the cinematography. Beauty and horror are inextricably tied together: the dead Willa with "her hair waving soft and lazy like meadow grass under flood water," or the little river animals watching the children escape under a starlit sky. But there are also moments of pure terror, such as the preacher's shadow falling over the kids, or calling out as they're hiding, "I'm out of patience, children. I'm coming to find you now..."

Robert Mitchum played another evil stalker several years later in the superb "Cape Fear," but this performance is even better. His Powell is a seething mass of murderous fervour and sexual hatred -- his intense eyes are enough to give you goosebumps. He's also backed by some excellent performances -- Chapin is amazing as the little boy determined to obey his father and somehow stop Powell. Bruce and Winters turn in some solid performances, and veteran Lillian Gish has a good supporting role as the kindly Rachel.

And at long last, this movie is getting the Criterion treatment! It's getting a cleaned-up, high-def digital transfer, audio commentary with the assistant director and some film experts, interviews with a Charles Laughton expert and the cinematographer, a trailer, a movie-length collection of archival material, a documentary with the producer and some other experts, sketches by Davis Grubb, and TV episodes centering on the movie. Plus, y'know, the required essay booklet.

As chilling and compelling as when it was first released, "Night of the Hunter" is a vibrant, primal experience, and nobody has quite come close to what it portrays.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Night of the Hunter Feb 18 2009
Format:DVD
Item arrived in good time - despite it being ordered so close to Christmas. Excellent packaging and condition. Will use again, without doubt.
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Most recent customer reviews
Childhood itself is under attack
It does not surprise me to see so many negative reviews. Almost every film I would call a masterpiece gets the same treatment. Read more
Published on Jun 26 2004 by TL
If this is a masterpiece, so is a paint-by-# of Mona Lisa
I am still wondering why this film has so much admiration, being called brilliant, a masterpiece, terrifying, etc. etc. Because I was laughing most of the way through it... Read more
Published on Feb 20 2004 by Susan Trexel
Deserves to be ranked with "Citizen Kane."
Charles Laughton, one of the greatest actors of Hollywood's Golden Age, made his directorial debut at age 56 with "Night of the Hunter. Read more
Published on Nov 15 2003 by Miles D. Moore
Mitchum is killer. Everyone else is filler.
I recently screened "Night of the Hunter" with Robert Mitchum and Shelley Winters. Winters, in my opinion, is THE worst actress of all time. Read more
Published on Jun 14 2003 by Ed Kaz
A Preacher's River, But Without A Baptism
When unctuous Reverend Harry Powell (Mitchum) learns where a convicted criminal has stashed some money, he literally casts an ominous shadow on his Depression-era, West Virginia... Read more
Published on May 12 2003
The Epic That WAS
"Night of the Hunter" is my favorite movie, bar none.

Recently, I was privileged to see, at Film Forum 2, in downtown Manhattan, a documentary called "The Epic That WAS" about... Read more

Published on May 11 2003
Powerfull and scary, it's Mitchum at his best (worst).
This was one of those movies that I heard so much about I just had to see it. After seeing Robert Mitchum in Cape Fear I realized that he may very well be the most frightening... Read more
Published on Mar 11 2003 by scott belba
Close to being a masterpiece
The Night of the Hunter is a film often cited as being "one of the greatest American movies" and a masterpiece. Read more
Published on Feb 2 2003
Where's The Other Davis Grubb Thriller Masterpiece Movie !?
The "Night of the Hunter" a superb classic masterpiece thriller 1956 movie starring Robert Mitchum based on the Novel written by Davis Grubb who also had another great masterpiece... Read more
Published on Jan 2 2003
A Religious Allegory
During the Great Depression a man robs a bank and kills two people in the process. He leaves the stolen money with his two small children and tells them to keep it secret and... Read more
Published on Nov 19 2002
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