Co-written by novice director
Terry Marcel and legendary Hammer composer
Harry Robertson (
The Oblong Box,
The Vampire Lovers,
Twins of Evil) and born out of their shared love for sword and sorcery novels, 'Hawk the Slayer' crams every
Tolkien and
Robert E. Howard trope it can afford - a witch, an elf, a dwarf, a suspiciously ungigantic giant, a magic sword and massed armies of several - into it's £600,000 budget (of which star
Jack Palance was reportedly paid a sixth) to create a ridiculously fantastic travesty of a movie that personally I have a bit of a soft spot for.
The storyline is essentially a thinly disguised riff on
The Magnificent Seven with the six shooters swapped for swords and bows and with the action relocated to a chilly, dry ice drenched park in Buckinghamshire. Obviously made with an eye to the international market the producers cast two Americans in the leads, the aforementioned Palance and debutant action hero
John Terry and they are both, well, they're both pretty terrible. Of the latter it's perhaps kindest to say that he's ineffectual and wooden and way out of his depth but would mature into roles in '
The Living Daylights', '
Full Metal Jacket' and '
Lost' whilst the former gives a scenery chewing performance of epic awfulness. Acting around them we have a troupe of reliable Brit supporting actors such as
Carry on... staple
Bernard Bresslaw (who would return to the fantasy genre again three years later in
Krull),
One Foot in the Grave's
Annette Crosbie,
Patricia Quinn (
The Rocky Horror Picture Show),
Harry Andrews (
Theatre of Blood),
Patrick Magee (
The Skull) and
Roy Kinnear (
The Bed Sitting Room) all of whom do much of the heavy lifting and keeping admirably straight faces.
Released at a time when fantasy movies of this sort were extremely thin on the ground and when interest in the fantastical was hitting fever pitch in the wake of Star Wars, Hawk was a box office bomb but one that quickly acquired a devoted fan following and whilst no sequels were ever made (until
Garth Ennis' 2022
comic series) it has been credited with triggering the flurry of similar movies that followed in it's wake such as
Dragonslayer,
Excalibur,
Conan the Barbarian,
The Beastmaster and the aforementioned Krull to name just a few.
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