ROOTS, RITUALS AND PHANTASMAGORIA

The Hunger

USA 1983, 87 mins
Director: Tony Scott


The Hunger helped challenge my perception of what dark fantasy could be. It didn’t have to be epic in scale, but by employing a quieter register and mood it was possible to weave an entrancing story. It’s a film that oozes gothic style thanks to its incredible cinematography and production design. If you didn’t already know, it stars David Bowie as an aged vampire whose no less voluptuous lover, played by Catherine Deneuve, is drawn to Susan Sarandon’s gerontologist.
Daniel Kokotajlo

Often lambasted as an exercise in style over content, Tony Scott’s take on the vampire genre is indeed a little showy, though given Scott’s background in TV commercials it’s perhaps not surprising. Pop-video clichés from the 1980s abound: doves fluttering among drapery, Bauhaus singing ‘Bela Lugosi’s Dead’ in a goth club, soft-core lesbian scenes and even a rollerblader grooving to Iggy Pop amid dry ice. But despite this The Hunger has dated surprisingly well. Catherine Deneuve is convincing as a centuries-old vampire in modern New York, and David Bowie turns in an unusually understated performance as her doomed lover. The influence of Nic Roeg is in evidence here, in particular that of Roeg and Donald Cammell’s Performance and the Bowie vehicle The Man Who Fell to Earth.
Ronnie Hackston, Sight and Sound, December 2004

As Ridley Scott was preparing Blade Runner, a script came to his agent for a film called The Hunger. Ridley’s agent is also Tony’s, and as the one Scott was busy the project was suggested for his brother, who had been working on a screenplay called My Dog’s on Fire by David Peoples (‘very strange, set in the year 3000, basically about gangs of kids called Mousepacks patrolling the streets of New York’). Tony Scott, who in partnership with Ridley has been making commercials ever since he emerged from the Royal College of Art, created two films for the BFI Production Board but has otherwise found his career thwarted by the collapse of two major productions, cancelled at the last minute – one for Paramount, the other for Filmways. He met Dick Shepherd, head of production at MGM in the era of The Goodbye Girl, Fame and Clash of the Titans, by the time-honoured process of sitting next to him in a plane, and when Shepherd saw a reel of his commercials (‘What really got to me was the Hovis and the Lee Cooper jeans’) there was no problem with The Hunger, which turned out to be a Shepherd project.

As it happens, The Hunger is a film about accelerated ageing and the hunt for eternal life. Based on a novel by Whitley Streiber (who wrote Wolfen), it stars Catherine Deneuve as an immortal being masquerading as human, who drifts through the centuries in parasitical symbiosis with a succession of lovers. Her current partner, played by David Bowie, discovers that he has reached the limit of the extended youthfulness his mistress has been able to confer upon him, and begins to decline rapidly into senility. They find in New York a specialist in gerontology (Susan Sarandon), who is researching the possible reversal of the ageing process, and she is drawn into the ménage with interestingly horrific results.

Scott admits cheerfully that the death-in-life theme has always fascinated him. Both his BFI films, One of the Missing and Loving Memory, poised their central characters on the edge of death, and for The Hunger the shells of unburied corpses preserved in an eerie semi-death at the Mexican town of Guanajuato (and in attendance at the credits of Herzog’s Nosferatu) were a particular inspiration. Echoing Blade Runner, The Hunger includes references to progeria, an appalling disease whose ten-year-old victims have the physical characteristics of people in their seventies, and to the centres which already exist for life-prolongation. ‘We place the Susan Sarandon character in a “sleep clinic” modelled on those places in California where they believe that through sleep pattern and diet you can stretch your life by 15 to 20 years. There’s one in Austria, where they actually recycle your blood.’

There could be other cross-references between the two Scott films by the time The Hunger is finished. Both productions have their allusions to ancient Egypt, both indulge in symbolism by means of a white dove (and with equal risk), and both have been shot through the gentle haze of smoke that seems to be a Scott trademark and which guarantees stunning quality of camerawork. Both films are themselves replicants of a kind, shot-for-shot simulacra of the detailed storyboards which the Scotts, each a brilliant designer, prepare in advance, drawing out their films on paper like miniature Heavy Metal comic strips. Above all, both films rely on a wholly modern artifice, the often invisible application of special effects to impersonate reality. For The Hunger, the puppetmaster is Dick Smith, who in 35 years has altered states for everyone from Dan Curtis to Ken Russell and for everything from The Cardinal to The Exorcist. Linda Blair’s revolving head, Marlon Brando’s jowls in The Godfather, De Niro’s bloodbath at the end of Taxi Driver, Katharine Ross’ ‘double’ in Stepford Wives, Smith has faked them all. Turning David Bowie into a 200-year-old for The Hunger has been no more daunting than making veins burst from the faces of the contestants in Scanners.

‘The quantum leap,’ says Smith, ‘has been in the last dozen years. Now everybody wants make-up illusions, and the technical and chemical developments have come up with the materials for us to do the job. We discovered, for example, that the cleaning fluid trichloroethane causes foam latex to swell, and so we could raise words on Linda Blair’s skin in The Exorcist or make an actor’s face burst open from snake venom in Death Bite. It’s no problem for us to make any kinds of limbs and do anything to them. We can make entire people if need be. Make them wholesale.’
Philip Strick, Sight and Sound, Summer 1982

THE HUNGER
Director: Tony Scott
Production Companies: Richard Shepherd Company, MGM/UA Entertainment
Producer: Richard A. Shepherd
Production Manager (New York): Alex Ho
Production Supervisor: Terry Clegg
Production Co-ordinator: Loretta Ordewer
Production Co-ordinator (New York): Ingrid Johanson
Location Manager: Gerry Levy
Location Manager (New York): Peter Pastorelli
Assistant Directors: David Tringham, Michael Stevenson, Debbie Vertue
Assistant Directors (New York): William Hassell, William Eustace, Roger Pugliese
Screenplay: Ivan Davis, Michael Thomas
Based on the novel by: Whitley Strieber
Director of Photography: Stephen Goldblatt
Director of Photography (New York):Tom Mangravite
Additional Photography: Hugh Johnson
Camera Operators: Bob Smith, John Palmer
Camera Operator (New York): Michael Stone
Special Effects: Graham Longhurst
Monkey Effects: David Allen, Roger Dicken
Additional Electronic Music/Effects: David Lawson
Editor: Pamela Power
Production Designer: Brian Morris
Art Director: Clinton Cavers
Art Director (New York): Vicky Paul
Set Decorator: Ann Mollo
Set Decorator (New York): Janet Rosenbloom
Scenic Artist (New York): Beverly Miller
Costume Designer: Milena Canonero
New York Costumer (Men): Al Crane
New York Costumer (Women): Beverly Cycon
Wardrobe Supervisor: Brenda Dabbs
Wardrobe Master: Kenny Crouch
Make-up Supervisors: Jane Royle, Ann Brodie
Make-up (New York): Paul Gobel
Special Make-up: Anthony Clavet
Make-up Illusions: Dick Smith, Carl Fullerton
Opticals: Peerless Camera Company
Music: Michael Rubini, Denny Jaeger
Music Arranged and Supervised by: Howard Blake
Sound Recording (New York): Dan Neroda
Sound Mixer: Clive Winter
Sound Mixer (New York): John Bolz
Sound Re-recording: Bill Rowe, Ray Merrin
Sound Editor: Peter Pennell
Sound Effects Editor: Campbell Askew
Special Assistant (Los Angeles): Angelo Pacifici
Studio: Shepperton Studios

Cast
Catherine Deneuve (Miriam Blaylock)
David Bowie (John Blaylock)
Susan Sarandon (Sarah Roberts)
Cliff De Young (Tom Haver)
Beth Ehlers (Alice Cavender)
Dan Hedaya (Lieutenant Allegrezza)
Rufus Collins (Charlie Humphries)
Suzanne Bertish (Phyllis)
James Aubrey (Ron)
Ann Magnuson (young woman from disco)
John Stephen Hill (young man from disco)
Shane Rimmer (Jelinek)
Bauhaus (disco group)
Douglas Lambert (TV host)
Bessie Love (Lillybelle)
John Pankow (phone booth youth 1)
Willem Dafoe (phone booth youth 2)
Sophie Ward (girl in London house)
Philip Sayer (boy in London house)
Lise Hilboldt (waiting room nurse)
Michael Howe (intern 1)
Edward Wiley (intern 2)
Richard Robles (skater)
George Camiller (Eumenes)
Oke Wambu (Egyptian slave)
Kent Miller, Fred Yockers, Susan Hunter, James Wassenich, Allan Richards, Hilary Six, Carole-Ann Scott (cadavers)

USA 1983
97 mins
Digital


ROOTS, RITUALS AND PHANTASMAGORIA
Dead of Night + A Winter’s Dale
Mon 2 Sep 20:40; Sat 14 Sep 12:30
Little Otik Otesánek
Wed 4 Sep 20:15 + intro by musician and Starve Acre composer Matthew Herbert; Sat 21 Sep 17:45
Against the Crowd: Murrain + intro by novelist Andrew Michael Hurley + Omnibus: Whistle and I’ll Come to You
Sat 7 Sep 18:20
Play for Today: Robin Redbreast
Mon 9 Sep 18:30
Don’t Look Now
Tue 10 Sep 20:45; Thu 26 Sep 20:50; Sun 29 Sep 18:10
A Ghost Story for Christmas: A Warning to the Curious + Beasts: Baby
Fri 13 Sep 18:15
Eraserhead
Fri 13 Sep 20:45; Tue 1 Oct 21:00; Mon 7 Oct 18:10
Screenplay: White Lady + intro by filmmaker and season curator Daniel Kokotajlo + Children of the Stones (episode 1)
Mon 16 Sep 20:40
The Shout + Lonely Water (aka The Spirit of Dark and Lonely Water)
Wed 18 Sep 18:10 + Q&A with filmmakers Daniel Kokotajlo and Mark Jenkin; Sat 21 Sep 15:00; Wed 2 Oct 20:50
The Hunger
Thu 19 Sep 20:35; Sun 6 Oct 18:10


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Programme notes and credits compiled by Sight and Sound and the BFI Documentation Unit
Notes may be edited or abridged
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