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5 - The Thrill of the Nordic Kill: The Manhunt Movie in the Nordic Thriller
- from PART II - CRIME AND DETECTIVE NARRATIVES
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- By Rikke Schubart, Associate Professor at the University of Southern Denmark
- Edited by Tommy Gustafsson, Pietari Kääpä
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- Book:
- Nordic Genre Film
- Published by:
- Edinburgh University Press
- Published online:
- 25 October 2017
- Print publication:
- 15 May 2015, pp 76-90
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
‘This world's divided into two kinds of people: The hunter and the hunted,’ big-game hunter Rainsford says in The Most Dangerous Game (1932) and self-assuredly continues, ‘Luckily, I'm a hunter. Nothing can ever change that.’ Well, he will discover that in the manhunt movie even the hunter can become prey. The manhunt movie is a subgenre of the Hollywood thriller which joins two elements: big-game sport hunting and hunting humans. Sport hunting stirs up themes of nature and culture, morals and ethics, masculinity, and, finally, civilisation. Here, we will ask what happens when the subgenre is used in the Nordic thriller.
The chapter has three aims. First, it establishes the central generic traits of the manhunt movie. Second, it sets up a theoretical framework of sociobiological and ecological theories with hunting as a reference point. And, third, it examines the Nordic version of the manhunt movie focusing on the themes of hunting, nature, social standing and civilisation. I look at the Danish drama The Hunt (Thomas Vinterberg, 2012), the Norwegian thriller-heist-comedy Headhunters (Morten Tyldum, 2011) and the Swedish thrillers The Hunters (Jägarna, 1996) and False Trail (Jägarna 2, 2011) by Kjell Sundvall.
THE MANHUNT MOVIE
Since I cannot claim extensive knowledge of manhunt movies I will approach the subgenre with modesty. Some may claim that sport hunting of human game is not a genre but just a theme or a trope. I leave this discussion for others and will regard it a subgenre of the thriller and call it the manhunt movie.
The idea of combining sport hunting with hunting humans originates from Richard Connell's short story ‘The Hounds of Zaroff’ (1924) which was adapted as The Most Dangerous Game in 1932. Connell was inspired by biggame hunting in Africa, Asia and South America, which was popular among rich Americans in the 1920s.2 In Connell's story the big-game hunter Rainsford falls off a yacht in the Caribbean and swims to an isolated island owned by a Russian aristocrat, general Zaroff. Zaroff is a big-game hunter who has bought an island where he hunts shipwrecked sailors. At first Zaroff thinks he can share his unique ‘game’ with this fellow hunter, but Rainsford declines.