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User:Ms.Ipsum/sandbox/List of Adaptations of The Most Dangerous Game

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"The Most Dangerous Game" is a highly influential short story by Richard Connell. It tells the story of a big-game hunter, Sanger Rainsford, becoming the hunted when trapped on a jungle island owned by General Zaroff, a Russian aristocrat who has turned to hunting man after growing bored of hunting animals. This story as been adapted into many works across many forms of media, including film, radio, television, and others.

Film[edit]

  • Hard Target (1993) shifts the location to 1990s New Orleans, with homeless Vietnam war veterans voluntarily serving (in return for potential payment from a shady businessman) as human prey. It was followed by Hard Target 2, a direct-to-video sequel released in 2016.
  • The Pest (1997) is a comedic parody of the story, with German huntsman Gustav Shank accidentally bringing Puerto Rican teenage hustler Pestario "Pest" Vargas to his island instead of the skilled man he had intended to hunt, only to decide to hunt the Pest anyway due to his sheer obnoxiousness.
  • The Eliminator (2004) shows seven captured people who are hunted at night for sport on an island as a betting game for the wealthy.
  • Beyond the Reach (2014) depicts a young man who witnesses a hunter inadvertently kill someone must run from the killer. It was a remake of the 1974 television film Savages (see below).
  • The 2019-produced film The Hunt follows a similar premise. The film was originally going to be released in September 27, 2019 but release was postponed in response to Daytona and El Paso mass shootings in early August 2019. It is now set to release on March 13, 2020.

Radio[edit]

"The Most Dangerous Game" has been presented four times as a radio play.

Television[edit]

Influence of "The Most Dangerous Game" is commonly seen in television.

  • In The Wild Wild West episode, 1/4 "The Night of Sudden Death", Jim West and a circus girl are trapped inside an Africa Reserve wild animal Park in Colorado and are hunted by an insane big-game hunter Warren (Robert Loggia).
  • In the Get Smart episode, "Island of the Darned", Agents 86 and 99 are trapped on an island with a mad KAOS killer, Hans Hunter (Harold Gould).
  • This trope is used in the season 3 (1968), episode 22 of I Spy, "The Name of the Game".
  • In the Gilligan's Island episode "The Hunter", big-game hunter Jonathan Kincaid (Rory Calhoun) turns his sights on Gilligan when he realizes there are no wild animals on the island.
  • In the series finale of Bonanza, entitled "The Hunter", a deranged killer, Corporal Bill Tanner (Tom Skerritt), who is a former tracker for the United States Army, hunts Little Joe (Michael Landon).
  • In the 1977 pilot episode of Fantasy Island, a big-game hunter comes to the island to be hunted by a man, a twist on the usual version, in which the hunted participates against his will.
  • The Simpsons Halloween special "Treehouse of Horror XVI" contained a segment titled "Survival of the Fattest" which parodied the story closely. In this segment Mr. Burns invited much of the cast to his hunting lodge on a private island, only to reveal that he intended to hunt them all for sport. Another episode makes a reference to "The Most Dangerous Game" when Rainier Wolfcastle says that he bought a YMCA to demolish it and install a hunting ground dedicated to "hunt the most dangerous animal of all... Man."
  • In an episode of the animated sitcom American Dad!, the Smith family and a young woman become stranded on an island after Francine jumps off a cruise. Stan goes up to the mansion on this island to ask for help, but the inhabitants say that they are going to hunt the family. The Smiths and the young woman become trapped in a cave, where the young woman dies and they eat her to survive. The hunters then break into the cave and shoot the family. Stan sits up, realizing it is paint. At a party later, the hunters reveal that nobody really dies on The Most Dangerous Game Island.
  • The Incredible Hulk episode "The Snare" has Banner trapped on a private island owned by an insane hunter who not only craves the challenge of hunting humans, but considers the discovery of Banner's powerful Hulk form as a sign of a quarry who is even more of an appealing challenge.
  • In Season 2, Episode 21 of Criminal Minds, "Open Season", two brothers capture people stranded in a remote region of the wilderness outside Challis, Idaho, release them into the hills, and hunt them with compound bows for sport, referring the men as "bucks" and the women as "does."
  • In Season 13, Episode 15 of Law and Order: SVU, "Hunting Ground", a serial rapist and killer lures female escorts after their date to a remote area where he sets them free while he hunts them down to recapture them again.
  • In the Disney animated series The Mighty Ducks "The Most Dangerous Duck Hunt" episode, the heroes are trapped on an island and hunted.
  • In a "Dial M for Monkey" segment of the animated series Dexter's Laboratory, the hero, Monkey, is trapped by an alien big-game hunter named "Huntor," who also makes a cameo among a league of Hunters of "Sumarai Jack" in the Cartoon Network cartoon series Samurai Jack.
  • In Season 1, Episode 15 of Supernatural, "The Benders", a family has been behind disappearances in a city. The family snatches victims to hunt and kill. Sam and a police officer are taken, but Dean finds them and helps them subdue the family before it can cause them any harm.
  • In Season 7, Episode 12 of Futurama, "31st Century Fox", Bender becomes the target of a fox hunting club and is referred to as "the most dangerous game."
  • In Season 2 Episode 6 of The Blacklist, Elizabeth Keen and her FBI task force encounter a family in Idaho who trained the mother's youngest son to hunt and kill humans kidnapped by the eldest son.
  • The Outer Limits 1998 episode "The Hunt" is a story in which the hunting of animals has been banned by environmentalists and black market hunting of obsolete androids takes its place.
  • In the Season 3, Episode 5 episode of Archer, "El Contador", Lana and Archer are hunted by a drug lord.
  • Influence is seen in Season 3, Episode 22 episode of Riverdale, "Chapter Fifty-Seven: Survive the Night".
  • An episode of the animated series Johnny Bravo entitled "Hunted!" is an obvious parody of the story. The titular Johnny is forced to go through the same ordeal, but his stupidity and foolishness greatly frustrates the hunter, who eventually allows him to leave.
  • Season 6 episode 11 of Xena: Warrior Princess, "Dangerous Prey", is also inspired by The Most Dangerous Game. In this episode, Prince Morloch is a hunter who has grown bored of hunting animals, saying he's "killed one of every creature that walks this earth." He started hunting Amazons which grabbed the attention of Xena.
  • In season 3 of Wrecked, the plane crash survivors land on another island, where four wealthy men make them hunt each other, then hunting the survivor.
  • The Kids Next Door episode "Operation: S.A.F.A.R.I" is based on The Most Dangerous Game.

Other adaptations[edit]

The story has also served as an inspiration for books and films like Seventh Victim, Battle Royale, Predator, Predators,The Running Man and The Hunger Games. In the film Westworld, humans are allowed to hunt and kill androids until one, played by Yul Brynner, starts hunting them.

  • In the anime series Psycho-Pass, episodes 10 and 11 feature a wealthy cyborg tycoon who dons gentleman's hunting gear and hunts people in an underground maze with his robotic hounds.
  • In the video game Hitman: Contracts, the mission "Beldingford Manor" takes inspiration from this story.
  • In the video game Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc, the character Razoff takes inspiration from General Zaroff, even sharing similar names.
  • In the comic-book story "The Second Most Dangerous Game" (serialized in Martian Comics #8–10), Martians possess humans to continue their tradition of hunting other humans, after the practice has been outlawed. Richard Connell is a character.
  • In the comic book issue Daredevil #4 Daredevil fights a mad manhunter on a remote island.
  • In Clive Cussler's book DRAGON Dirk Pitt is chased by "Kamatori" on Soseki Island.
  • In the online game Poptropica, the five-part Survival Island features the player in a situation much like the one in the original story. At the end of the third episode, the player is rescued by a hunter known as Myron van Buren. The fourth episode revolves around the player in van Buren's cabin, finding out that van Buren plans to hunt them. In the fifth episode, the player teams up with another victim of van Buren to defeat him by trapping him in a waterwheel.
  • In the video game Psychonauts, Vernon, one of the campers, references to hunting the most dangerous game while playing hide and seek.
  • In 2006, The Onion parodied the premise, positing that humans would actually make rather pitiful prey.[13]
  • In Don Pendleton's The Executioner series, book #441, called Murder Island has a similar plot to the book. The protagonist, Mack "The Executioner" Bolan (a vigilante/government agent) encounters a rich businessman hunter on an island while on a mission and ends up in a similar position as the Rainsford character, while the rich hunter takes a similar role as Zaroff.
  • In a song called "Fly on the Wall" by Joey Pecoraro, the opening interaction between Rainsford and General Zaroff is used as a prelude to the actual song.
  • In 1987, American Metal band Laaz Rockit retold the story in their song "Most Dangerous Game" on their album Know Your Enemy. [14]
  • The Rooster Teeth series "Let's Play Minecraft" featured an adaptation of the story into a game played by the show's cast members in the video game Minecraft, where one player was given a map and hunted by the other five in and around the in-game world created by the Achievement Hunter cast members.
  • A translated version was published in Malayalam as an audio book by Kathacafe in 2017.[15]
  • In the video game West of Loathing a hunter's ghost challenges the player to play "the most dangerous game". After the player character shows disgust at hunting people the ghost says that wasn't what he meant.

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ "A Game of Death". American Film Institute. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
  2. ^ Jewell, Richard B., The RKO Story. New Rochelle, New York: Arlington House, 1982. ISBN 0-517-54656-6
  3. ^ Holston, Kim R. (1990). Richard Widmark: A Bio-bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 59. ISBN 9780313264801.
  4. ^ Senn 2013, p. 33–36.
  5. ^ Senn 2013, p. 60–64.
  6. ^ Senn 2013, p. 50.
  7. ^ a b Graysmith, Robert (2007-01-01). Zodiac Unmasked: The Identity of America's Most Elusive Serial Killer Revealed. Penguin. pp. 455, 516. ISBN 9780425212738.
  8. ^ Pitts, Michael R. (2002). Horror Film Stars. McFarland. p. 470. ISBN 9780786410521.
  9. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  10. ^ "Suspense". RadioGOLDINdex. Retrieved 2014-02-17.
  11. ^ "Escape". RadioGOLDINdex. Retrieved 2014-02-17.
  12. ^ http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Tales-of-Fatima.html
  13. ^ "Maverick Hunter's 'Human Beings As Prey' Plan Not As Challenging As Expected". TheOnion.com. 2006-01-17. Retrieved 2019-03-30.
  14. ^ https://www.metal-archives.com/albums/L%C3%A4%C3%A4z_Rockit/Know_Your_Enemy/2881
  15. ^ "Malayalam audio Book".