Difference between revisions of "Turkey Shoot"

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Revision as of 14:45, 8 February 2011

Turkeyshoot.jpg
Turkey Shoot poster

Escape 2000 poster 01.jpg

Australia.jpg

Also Known As

  • Blood Camp Thatcher (UK) (video title)
  • Escape 2000 (USA)
  • Insel der Verdammten (Germany)
  • Kalkkunan metsästys (Finland)
  • Les Traqués de l'an 2000 (France)

Taglines

  • Hunting is the national sport...and people are the prey!
  • Controversial! Violent! The film that shocked Australian critics and broke Box Office records in London!
  • Experience The Year 2000...And Hope To Hell You Can Escape!
  • The day the future had to be stopped.

Main Details

  • Released in 1982
  • Color
  • Running Time: 93 min | USA:80 min
  • Production Co: FGH | Filmco Limited | Hemdale Film
  • Distribution Co: New World Pictures (1983) (USA) (theatrical) | Ciné Paris Distribution (1983) (France) (theatrical)

Cast and Crew

  • Directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith
  • Written by Jon George, Neill D. Hicks, David Lawrence, George Schenck, Robert Williams
  • Starring Steve Railsback, Olivia Hussey, Michael Craig, Carmen Duncan
  • Produced by Brian W. Cook, John Daly, William Fayman, Antony I. Ginnane, David Hemmings
  • Original Music by Brian May
  • Cinematography by John R. McLean
  • Film Editing by Alan Lake

Film Review

Ozploiticon.jpg Genremixes.jpg Scificon.jpg Template:Antony I. Ginnane

Turkey Shoot is undoubtedly the most famous film of Australia’s exploitation cycle – or perhaps the better term is infamous. Despite the majority of Australia’s exploitation output being locked away in a closet (although this is changing with the release of Mark Hartley’s Not Quite Hollywood), Turkey Shoot is one of the few which has managed to remain relatively known (along with, perhaps, Richard Franklin’s Road Games and Russell Mulcahy’s Razorback – although the latter probably for the wrong reasons). It’s notoriety was generated mostly from critic reaction to the film upon its release (its outrageous exploitative violence being the main target).

The film concerns a futuristic society (similar to the dystopian environment of George Orwell’s 1984 perhaps) where rebellious citizens are shipped off to behavioural modification camps to re-align them with the ways of the state. The film centres on repeat offender Paul Anders, innocent bystander Chris Walters and beautiful blonde Rita Daniels (played by the busty Lynda Stoner) as they are taken to a camp run by Michael Craig’s Thatcher. Once there, they are given a proposition: elude Thatcher and his guests in a forest manhunt for a day and you earn your freedom.

Turkey Shoot is classic exploitation. The primary attraction is the hunt and the brilliant splatter sequences, but the film also resembles (especially at the start) a classic Women-in-prison film. Women in communal showers, prison guards taking advantage of them, torture, a breakout with guns blazing. The prison is co-ed, but the style is definitely there. It is a film imbued with the very spirit of exploitation and consequently, it is the first film I recommend to people when on the subject of Australian exploitation. Then there’s the death sequences. It’s hard now to see why the violence in the film caused such a problem with the Australian critics of the time. People are cut in half, crossbow bolts pierce numerous body parts, heads explode. But it’s all so innocently entertaining that it’s hard to be offended at all.

Reviewed by Angel (27 March 2008)

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