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YOR,
THE HUNTER
FROM THE FUTURE
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Italy
- France -
Turkey
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1983
Directed
by Antonio Margheriti
Starring
Reb
Brown
Corinne Clery
John Steiner
Color |
89 Minutes |
PG
Format: DVD-R (NTSC)
Sony Home Entertainment
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Music
from the film
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Yor's
World
MP3 - 10.5 MB
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Review
by
Rod Barnett
Film:7
DVD:5
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| I
don't think I'm exaggerating to say that Yor,
the Hunter from the Future is one of the great under-appreciated
cult films of the 1980s and it might just be one of the best examples
of that hoariest of clichés — the guilty pleasure. At least, that
is what I spent years calling it whenever it would come up in
discussions of bizarre movies. Yor
is a film fondly remembered by a certain age group of boys lucky
enough to have caught one of the roughly gazillion screenings
afforded it by mid-1980s cable television. For a couple of years
it was in steady rotation owing to its PG rating, its kid appeal
and the 90 minute running time. It even had a little shapely female
skin to keep the occasional older viewer from thumbing the remote
too quickly. But even with the shapely Reb Brown... uh,
I mean Corinne (Hitch-Hike)
Clery showing off his pecs... I mean her legs... dammit!
Even with the eye candy I dismissed Yor
for a long time for the most obvious reasons. It is, after all,
a silly-looking barbarian movie with poorly articulated dinosaurs
and a story that morphs into science fiction halfway through.
When I was in my teens that spelled crappy movie; now that I'm
a couple of decades older that same description spells insta-classic! |
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Of
course, regardless of the pretty actors on screen the real star
of this film is director Antonio Margheriti, alias "Anthony
M. Dawson". Margheriti is one of my favorite lesser known
Italian filmmakers of the grand golden age of exploitation cinema.
In a career almost forty years long he made movies in nearly every
genre imaginable, from science fiction (The
Wild, Wild Planet) to westerns (And
God Said to Cain) to gialli (Naked
You Die) to comedy (Mr. Superinvisible)
to action (Jungle Raiders) to horror
(Castle
of Blood), all the time displaying a competence that made
him a name you could always trust. He might not always have the
biggest budgets or strongest scripts, but he crafted the best
film he could every time. His background as a special effects
man and miniature builder allowed him to make his productions
look more impressive than they probably should. He is still the
only filmmaker to make an Indiana Jones rip-off I can enjoy. |
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For
years Margheriti had the dream of making a film from the comic
book Yor by Juan Zanotto and Ray Collins. Actually the
original title of the series was Henga but the comics were
re-titled for the Italian market, where the director found and
read them. The chance to realize this mad jungle action story
on the screen came not for cinemas but from Italian television.
That's right — this project was made for TV and it wasn't a simple
telefilm either. The better to adapt the long-form tale, it was
shot as four one-hour episodes from which the shorter theatrical
cut was assembled for the American market and home video. In fact,
the theatrical version was distributed by Columbia in the United
States and was a surprise minor box-office hit, landing in the
top ten soon after release. (What mad times the 1980s were, huh?)
Apparently the four-part miniseries was never shown on television
until years later, and then only late at night. (Yor
just can't get any respect.) These days it's nearly impossible
to locate the full-length version and if you can it is usually
a terrible looking copy that is (of course) only in Italian. What
I hope for one day is a DVD release of the entire miniseries subtitled
for us American fans to finally see all the amazing monster battles
left out of the shorter cut. Hey, if Starcrash
can be released on Blu-Ray... Yor, the Hunter
from the Future should make its way to my greedy hands
as well! Yor is barbarian movie cheese
of the highest order and is something any cult movie fan needs
to see. |
The
movie opens with ex-USC football star Reb Brown (Howling
II) in a bizarre blond wig, as buff he-man Yor, running
across the desert in search of... well, we're not really sure
what he's looking for or what might be on his mind at this point.
He looks like he's thrilled and happy to be running around the
middle of nowhere in a loincloth, though, so you just need to
go with it. Under this opening scene we have the rock theme
known as Yor's World pounding away and its English lyrics
can be a clue as to just how odd things will get. At the same
time we're introduced to Ka-Laa (the winsome Corinne Clery),
a primitive cavewoman, and her older protector/father figure
Pag (legendary Italian character actor Luciano "Alan Collins"
Pigozzi) as they hunt. When they are attacked by a Stegosaurus-like
creature Yor leaps to their defense, killing the dinosaur with
his mighty stone axe. Pag is grateful and Ka-Laa is aroused
so they invite their strange blond savior back to their village
to celebrate. Everything seems to be going very well until,
only a few minutes after Yor starts to take notice of Ka-Laa's
hot bod, a band of cavemen with bluish skin attack the village,
slaughtering almost everyone in sight and capturing Ka-Laa.
Yor immediately swears to get Ka-Laa back so he and Pag track
the blue cavemen to their lair where Yor is able to rescue the
fair lady, wipe out the nasty cave-dwelling tribe and invent
hang gliding all within about thirty minutes. If you've ever
wondered what Reb Brown would look like dangling from the carcass
of a giant bat then you need look no further than this brilliant
film!
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After
this bonding adventure Ka-Laa and Pag decide to follow Yor in
his stated journey to find his true origins. Along the way, they
come upon a tribe of dirty, desert-dwelling marauders led by a
blonde woman (Ayshe Gul) with an amulet similar to the one seen
dangling around Yor's neck throughout the movie. And, as you might
expect, since this woman is the only other fair-haired human we've
seen in all of Yor's world she turns out to be related to the
mystery behind why our hero is so different from everyone else.
But what about Ka-Laa's lustful affections for Yor? Will the call
of the wild beat out the call of the blonde hair and matching
jewelry? |
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Of
course, there is much more to the story... Yor and his merry little
group finally make their way to an island, where he discovers
that his parents were among a small band of nuclear holocaust
survivors — revealing the twist that Yor's prehistoric world is
actually Earth after said holocaust. But the American theatrical
title gave this twist away already, not to mention the poster
art, so I'm not sure how many viewers beyond the age of 8 were
all that surprised. The real joys of Yor
are in the sheer fun of the adventure. There are rarely any slow
moments, with a new surprise waiting just around the next sandy
rock formation. What other movie gives you giant bats, humans
frozen in an ice cave, dinosaur battles, robot warriors, hot cave
girls, exploding miniatures and a fight with a flaming sword?
When you shrink a tale's four hours of story down to less than
90 minutes it moves like a rocket and Yor
almost never stops moving. The spate of barbarian movies piggybacking
on the success of 1982's
Conan the Barbarian were a truly mixed bag but this
movie deserves to be singled out for special attention. Director
Margheriti knew how to make movies like this entertaining and
fun for an audience that might wish the days of Hercules and Machiste
movies had never ended. There was a lot of care taken on every
level of this pulpy voyage, making it something worth savoring
for its unique vision. It's a cut above the average even if Reb
Brown's blond wig is something I wish had been rethought in pre-production.
One thing that was completely perfect is the amazing score! A
combination of rock songs by the De Angelis brothers and more
traditional orchestrations by John Scott, it's a wonderfully odd
succession of music that somehow always finds the right tone to
enrich the action. |
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| Although
I wish Yor,
the Hunter from the Future
had come to disc blazing like a futuristic spaceship with lots
of bells & whistles, I am glad to have what is presented. Sony
has issued the American cut in a Burn on Demand DVD-R that gives
us the movie in a pleasingly bright and colorful print anamorphically
enhanced for widescreen televisions. Other than a few speckles
in spots the movie looks good and the sound is clear and crisp.
Considering how little attention has been given to the film over
the years this is at least a solid first digital release. Being
able to see it in widescreen for the first time makes the impressive
miniature work in the cave flood scene even more stunning. Margheriti
really was a wizard at matching his sets to his effects in a way
that puts a lot of modern CGI work to shame. The only extra included
is the theatrical trailer, so fans like me will just have to be
happy until we can convince someone that a giant multi-disc special
edition is necessary. I want the four-hour version on Blu-ray,
complete with a cast and crew commentary track! After seeing this
disc you just might want that as well. 11/18/11 |
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