Il cacciatore di uomini (TV Movie 2009) Poster

(2009 TV Movie)

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4/10
Cheap, African-shot Italian thriller
Leofwine_draca4 June 2016
This TV movie's international pedigree intrigued me; it's an Italian television production, shot in English, and filmed briefly in London and mainly in Kenya. It's a rather cheap and cheerful production but it does tell a fairly interesting story about a hit-man going undercover in Africa to bring down a target and the British tour guide he hooks up with.

Surprisingly, for a TV movie, this is a rather gory affair with some bloody squib hits throughout and other adult situations. It's also rather goofy, with cheap and occasionally inept staging, but the authentic location photography helps to make up for this. I was particularly interested in watching because Michele Massimo Tarantini writes and directs, and he's been working since the 1970s with a career that includes WOMEN IN FURY and MASSACRE IN DINOSAUR VALLEY.

The protagonist is played by the lithe Luca Ward, who I found to be quite convincing as a grizzled hit-man. Bryony Afferson plays the tour guide and is less assured; it's quite obvious to anyone watching that she's not the most experienced of actresses, but I nonetheless found myself warming to her as the story progresses and she's certainly a rather striking redhead. Overall, though, THE African GAME is a rather cheesy and silly thriller, and it doesn't work all that well despite the potential of the premise.
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7/10
All a bit odd, really
neil-47621 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A hit man pretends to be a tourist and hires a rather gobby northern English girl safari guide to ferry him around Tsavo National Park while he occasionally pinches her car to go off and commit murder.

This workmanlike film suffers from weirdness. The double act of Luca Ward as the hit-man and Bryony Afferson as the guide with an awful lot to say for herself, doesn't really have a vast amount of chemistry, though both players work fairly hard to convince (without necessarily succeeding 100% of the time). In particular, I had trouble taking Afferson's Kate on board, though this might be because of the way the character is written: Afferson herself is an attractive (if ginger) screen presence. Rachel Grant makes an exotic villainess.

Filmed entirely in Africa, it doesn't really make the most of its location: it all seems rather matter-of-fact. Billed as a TV movie, it is quite violent (a lot of blood) and there is a fair amount of bad language, mostly from Miss Afferson.
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