OMDB
Home Movies Series Search
OMDB

Built by Torkel Aannestad with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource code
Man in the Wilderness
Man in the Wilderness

Man in the Wilderness (1971)

62% User Rating
1h 44min
Western
Adventure
Drama

"He was left for dead. He would not forget."

In the early 1800s, a group of fur trappers and Indian traders are returning with their goods to civilization and are making a desperate attempt to beat the oncoming winter. When guide Zachary Bass is injured in a bear attack, they decide he's a goner and leave him behind to die. When he recovers instead, he swears revenge on them and tracks them and their paranoiac expedition leader down.

Richard C. SarafianDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Richard Harris

Richard Harris

Zachary Bass

John Huston

John Huston

Captain Filmore Henry

Henry Wilcoxon

Henry Wilcoxon

Indian Chief

Percy Herbert

Percy Herbert

Fogarty

Prunella Ransome

Prunella Ransome

Grace

Dennis Waterman

Dennis Waterman

Lowrie

Sheila Raynor

Sheila Raynor

Grace's Mother

Norman Rossington

Norman Rossington

Ferris

James Doohan

James Doohan

Benoit

The Movie Database

John Bindon

Coulter

Bryan Marshall

Bryan Marshall

Potts

Ben Carruthers

Ben Carruthers

Longbow

Bruce M. Fischer

Bruce M. Fischer

Wiser

Robert Russell

Robert Russell

Smith

Dean Selmier

Dean Selmier

Russell

The Movie Database

Manolo Landau

Zachary as a child

William Layton

William Layton

Schoolmaster

Judith Furse

Judith Furse

Nurse

The Movie Database

Ines Acosta

Pregnant Indian

The Movie Database

Raúl Castro

The Movie Database

Tony Cyrus

Indian

The Movie Database

Tamara Sie

Indian

The Movie Database

Joaquín Solís

Ambushed Trapper

The Movie Database

Martha Tuck

Woman with Trapper

Reviews (1)

All Reviews
John Chard
John Chard
Rating 70%

September 25, 2014

God Made The World! Man in the Wilderness is directed by Richard C. Sarafian and written by Jack DeWitt. It stars Richard Harris, John Huston, Prunella Ransome, Percy Herbert, Henry Wilcoxon, Norman Rossington and Dennis Waterman. Music is by Johnny Harris and cinematography by Gerry Fisher. "1820. The Captain Henry Expedition has completed two years of fur trapping in the unexplored Northwest territory. Determined to reach the Missouri River before the winter snows, the trappers and their boat, towed by 22 mules, struggled through the wilderness. Once on the Missouri they could sail south to the trading posts and sell their precious cargo. What occurred on this expedition is historically true." He was left for dead. He would not forget. Essentially, Man in the Wilderness is the redemptive tale of Zachary Bass (Harris). Left for dead by his unfeeling Captain (Huston) after being savaged by a grizzly bear, Bass survives the wilds of nature and the threat of man with revenge firmly on his mind. But as he recuperates and adjusts to the spiritualisation that the surrounds brings him, he looks back at his life and beliefs. It is undeniably a very slow picture, with dialogue appropriately in short supply, but the atmosphere created is perfect for the unfolding events. Strikingly the film also has a surreal quality that really cloaks the story with considerable impact, where deft touches of imagery land firmly in the conscious. The makers slot in some "bloody" moments, backed with tension, such as the well constructed sequences involving the bear attack and a time when Bass has to scare away two snarling wolves so he "also" can feast off of a stricken Bison. The presence of Indian attacks is handled with care by the director, and in fact helps the finale get away with the expected outcome. While strong moments such as two separate incidents involving rabbits really show the makers to have the best of intentions to tell a valid and interesting story. Especially when it's scenes of just Bass and nature at war. Narratively, however, it is a bit hit and miss. The pertinent question of faith and the use of flashbacks are an uneasy alliance, mostly because the former drapes the film in predictability, and the latter takes you out of the whole "man in the wilderness" struggle that Bass is luring us into. It renders the film far from flawless which is a shame because it has much to recommend a viewing. The Almería, Andalucía location is used to good effect to pass as the Northwest of America, where quite often Gerry Fisher's photography neatly shifts between beauty and the harshness of mother nature. Harris could do this type of role in his sleep, he isn't asked to stretch himself but still leaves a very favourable impression. Huston is up to scratch, but again he doesn't have to do much, while everybody else are giving performances that any other working actor of the time could have given. A movie of rewards and frustrations for sure, and it's no Jeremiah Johnson, but this is definitely worth a spin for anyone interested in the "Man Vs Nature" sub-genre of period films. 7/10

Media

View All Media
Mauled by a Grizzly Bear

Mauled by a Grizzly Bear

Man in the Wilderness

Man in the Wilderness

Recommended

View All Recommended
Torpedo: U-235
The Making of 'Psycho'
Little Murders
Inferno
Scary Tales
Amy
Brooklyn
Ex Machina
The Devil Wears Prada
Gerry
'G' Men
The Old Gun
Cyborg
Torn Curtain
A Lizard in a Woman's Skin
Happy Together
Inception
Captivity
Stage Fright
Ghostbusters