Fate Is the Hunter

1964

Action / Drama / Mystery / Thriller / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Laurie Mitchell Photo
Laurie Mitchell as Bar hostess
Suzanne Pleshette Photo
Suzanne Pleshette as Martha Webster
Stanley Adams Photo
Stanley Adams as Bernie
Rod Taylor Photo
Rod Taylor as Capt. Jack Savage
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
971.16 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 45 min
P/S 0 / 3
1.76 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 45 min
P/S 4 / 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer8 / 10

Not just another airplane in trouble flick.

Shortly after this movie begins, an airliner crashes...killing nearly everyone aboard. Soon, folks start asking questions about how this crash could have happened. And, an executive with the airline, Sam McBane (Glenn Ford) is looking into the cause of the crash and not just allowing the CAB (the Civil Aeronautics Board...the precursor to the Federal Aviation Administration) to find out the cause. Part of this is because it happened to one of his company's planes but the bigger reason seems to be that Sam knew the pilot and through a long series of flashbacks you learn about the dead man's character. So what was the cause? And, can Sam handle the truth?

This is one of quite a few air disaster films from the 1950s-70s. However, unlike the rest of these movies, this is one of the few that focuses on a crash and the investigator (the only other movie somewhat similar is Jimmy Stewart's "No Highway on the Sky"). So, it's not another "The High and the Mighty" or "Airport"...it offers something a bit different. That makes "Fate is the Hunter" an original sort of airplane film.

Overall, a well made and well acted film that is worth your time. Not among Glenn Ford's best...but a dandy movie.

Reviewed by bkoganbing8 / 10

The Black Box

Fate Is The Hunter casts Glenn Ford as an airline executive and former pilot who is investigating the crash of an airline at his airport where a former Korean war buddy Rod Taylor was the pilot. Most on the flight were killed, one of the survivors was stewardess Susanne Pleshette.

Ford has a vested interest both professional and personal, he hired Taylor as a pilot and his judgment is called in question as well. And Taylor was a roguish sort of guy who bent the rules considerably. But Ford knew Taylor as a man cool in combat and we see Taylor after the initial crash in all sides of his character in flashback.

The film is based on an Ernest K. Gann novel who also gave us Island In The Sky and The High And The Mighty. The film keeps the attention throughout with its documentary like approach. Ford is a man with a disagreeable task and he's praying his faith in Taylor will not be in vain.

The airline is more interested in covering itself in case of potential lawsuits than at getting at the truth. Pilot error is the easiest explanation all around and Taylor's past doesn't help any.

There are a couple of noteworthy supporting performances first being Dorothy Malone who was not billed oddly enough as a party girl who Taylor was involved with and dumped. It's a chip off the performance Malone gave as Marilee Hadley in Written On The Wind. Also noteworthy is Wally Cox who was a fellow crewman on Taylor and Ford's ship in Korea who provides an insight into an incident in Korea that Ford does not remember fondly.

What does cause the crash? It's something quite trivial, but Taylor's posthumous reputation owes a debt of gratitude to Susanne Pleshette surviving the crash and to the black box recording even then, standard on commercial flights. It was kind of quaint seeing the airline investigators playing the black box recording on those old fashioned reel to reel tapes.

For aviation fans and fans of the principal players and many others. A really good piece of work that all the cast could take pride in.

Reviewed by rmax3048235 / 10

A Wing And A Prayer.

It certainly looks as if the whimsical, Byronic airline captain Rod Taylor is responsible for this accident, which left 52 people dead, himself included, sparing only Susanne Pleshette, the flight attendant. The airline traffic safety board convenes and, despite the strong reservations of executive Glenn Ford, an old friend of Taylor's, is headed towards the dreaded explanation of "pilot error." You see, Taylor was observed patronizing several bars the night before the flight, in the company of someone named Mickey who can't be located. Taylor had a history of cheerful abandon even during the war and he's a kind of convenient scapegoat alright.

Glenn Ford, however, is convinced that some other force was at work. He tracks down some old friends of Taylor's and they all vouch for his probity. At the last minute, the mysterious and alcoholic Mickey shows up and reveals that although Taylor bought a dozen drinks the night before the accident, they were all for him, Mickey, not for Taylor Not good enough for the Board of Inquisitors. If it wasn't booze, what was it? Taylor apparently lost one engine after another shortly after take off then, perhaps in a panic, plowed into a pier that no one knew was there.

Taking his cue from the gorgeous Nancy Kwan, an oceanographer who had a perfectly innocent meeting with Taylor, Ford advances the novel proposition before the board that if it wasn't mechanical failure and it wasn't pilot error, then it must have been -- "the supernatural." Yes, girls and boys, FATE is the hunter. What else could have brought all these conditions together -- the flight of birds, the engine failure, the unknown pier, the radio failure -- at exactly the right time and place to cause the accident except -- fate.

Actually, you don't have to dig into the supernatural (or reach skyward) for that. It can be explained by a simple and drab deterministic universe. Everything that happens at a given place and time is determined by a multitude of previous events. One thing causes another and every once in a while they come together in a wildly improbable manner to cause something more important than all of them put together. You will sometimes have a perfect accident just as you will sometimes have a "perfect storm." Ford may call it Fate but I'd call it statistical probability.

That's a little egg-headed, I know, but the explanation is never explored anyway. It all turns out to have to do with a paper cup of coffee that spilled on Taylor's pedestal when the first engine quit and the airplane jarred momentarily. The coffee dripped into an electrical unit and shorted out some other circuits and caused all sorts of false alarms, to which Taylor unwittingly responded. That was fate in a cup of coffee. Maxwell House, I hope.

Harold Medford wrote the screenplay which has practically nothing to do with Ernet K. Gann's superb memoirs with the same title. I imagine Medford being handed the assignment with directions something like this. "We've got the rights to Gann's book. Now make up a story that will fit the title. And we've got Glenn Ford, Nancy Kwan, Dorothy Malone, Susanne Pleshette, Mark Stevens, and some reliable supporting players, so squeeze all of them in. Try to make the story about airplanes." Not much from the book appears in the movie. Sometimes events show up but in altered form. It was Gann who played the concertina, not a friend. And it was Gann who got the garter of the famous lady on the USO tour during the war, only the famous lady wasn't Jane Russell but Marlene Dietrich.

Oh, hell. You want a bewitching story about fate and flying? Read the book.

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