The Hunted

2003 "Some men should not be found."
6.1| 1h34m| R| en| More Info
Released: 11 March 2003 Released
Producted By: Lakeshore Entertainment
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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In the wilderness of British Columbia, two hunters are tracked and viciously murdered by Aaron Hallam. A former Special Operations instructor is approached and asked to apprehend Hallam—his former student—who has 'gone rogue' after suffering severe battle stress from his time in Kosovo.

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Director

William Friedkin

Production Companies

Lakeshore Entertainment

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The Hunted Audience Reviews

Karry Best movie of this year hands down!
Livestonth I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Comeuppance Reviews Aaron Hallam (Del Toro) is a Kosovo veteran and also an unstoppable killing machine. When the mentally unstable Hallam returns home to Oregon, he continues his killing spree. This grabs the attention of FBI Special Agent Abby Durrell (Nielsen), who wants to stop him. As it turns out, this particular unhinged maniac was trained by a survival expert and knife maestro named L.T. Bonham (Jones). He's not lieutenant Bonham, he's L.T. Bonham, as he does point out he never was actually in the military, he just used his expertise to train the recruits. Feeling guilty that his star student is now on the rampage, Bonham comes out of retirement to do one last track, which inevitably leads into the final teacher-versus-student knife fight...but who really is THE HUNTED? Maybe we'll all find out together...It's First Blood (1982) meets The Fugitive (1993) meets White Ghost (1988) as Tommy Lee Jones puts on his grizzled hat once again. This was towards the beginning of what came to be known as the GeriAction trend in Hollywood, where an older generation of actors - within a certain range, mind you - wanted to try a few last punches and kicks before they kicked off this mortal coil. Everyone from Clint Eastwood to Liam Neeson to Sean Penn have tried it lately with varying degrees of success. As anyone who reads this site knows, we almost always root for the older guys. We hate young punks and we cheer when they lose. All that being said, I think it's fair to expect more of the great director William Friedkin than what we get here. It's all so simple, paint-by-numbers, one-dimensional even. Some guy is on the loose and Tommy Lee Jones is "Hunting" him. Is it wrong to want just a bit more meat on the bone than that? It feels like you've seen a lot of this before - just the images of Tommy Lee Jones in front of a waterfall will remind you of the aforementioned Fugitive. And a former military man with a knife that the authorities are chasing in the Pacific Northwest wilderness should bring to mind a certain Stallone movie series that we all know and love. They had enough time for the clichés we've all seen before, but somehow they couldn't find the time for some character development or human drama. They even fell back on the tired "Vietnam vet goes crazy" scenario, which could certainly be argued is insensitive, if not insulting. But we may not have noticed if that hadn't been done so many times before. The only difference is now it's Kosovo, not Vietnam. We would think that by 2003 Hollywood would have used up every last drop of that trope, but no, apparently not.This is one time that we can think of that we can't necessarily sign off on approving an 88-minute running time, like we usually do. Evidently there was more character development left on the cutting room floor. While we appreciate the sentiment to try to make the movie lean and mean, a couple more dialogue scenes that might have fleshed out the characters or explained their motivations would have gone a long way. It would have helped the audience care more about the Bonham-Hallam relationship, which would have increased the suspense. The filmmakers also seemed ambivalent about Connie Nielsen's character - they should have given her more screen time or axed her altogether. As it stands, she's just kinda there. We would have opted for more Nielsen, as her run on Law & Order: SVU were some of the best episodes of that series to date. The Hunted could have used a tough female, Dani Beck-like character.Looking at the movie a mere twelve years later (TWELVE years have passed since this came out? Maybe it's not so mere after all), it's hard to believe it got a theater release. If this was released today it would go DTV or on-demand, almost certainly. While it does contain the appropriate amount of action and violence - we even get some classic Tommy Lee Jones-Fu, or, to be more accurate, a Filipino fighting style called Sayoc Kali - it's hard to shake the feeling something is missing here. Perhaps we should hire L.T. Bonham to hunt it down...but then we'd be right back to where we started, wouldn't we?
poe-48833 Coming as it did from William Friedkin (THE FRENCH CONNECTION, THE EXORCIST, etc.), one couldn't help but have some pretty high expectations going into THE HUNTED; it wasn't long, however, before one was reminded that it was also Friedkin who gave us the inferior remake of THE WAGES OF FEAR (titled SORCEROR) and (we're told) much of the nasty Brando/Kilmer version of THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU. It seems somehow appropriate to revisit THE HUNTED at this point in History: there has been an average of one mass shooting a day in this country so far this year (a "mass shooting" being defined as a shooting in which four or more people are shot); even more shocking is THIS statistic: there has been an average of one shooting a day BY A TODDLER so far this year, as well. (With 300 Million guns owned by 312 Million people in this country, these stats aren't exactly surprising- although it IS surprising that Congress refuses to allow an investigation into the Cause(s) of such Rampant Violence...) The hand-to-hand combat scenes in THE HUNTED are short but sweet; otherwise, forget it.
Dom Nickson I recommend it for anybody who loves intense action movie fans! It is so phenomenal to see Benicio Del Toro go against Tommy Lee Jones in the end. I loved this whole movie from beginning to end! Whoever made this deserves to be more recognized! It is just so intense and awesome I would love to congratulate every single one of the cast members for this intense action thriller! As a matter of fact I never knew anything about this film until I got it at the library back in 2006 and I didn't know what to expect. My Gosh though when I saw it I thought it was going to be a boring drama but it literally blew me out of my shoes. As soon as I finished watching it I thought I have to have this movie! Sure enough I bought and it couldn't stop watching it over and over to this day. I give it a solid 10 out of 10! Everything was perfect!
adi_2002 L.T. is a trainer that teach others how to kill in the fastest and precise way possible. After several deer hunters are found dead in the woods FBI seeks the help of L.T. in order to find the person who did this and he knows after seeing the place where the murders occurs that never the less the author is his best student that he had Aaron. Now he begin his pursuit after him but finds out that is not that easy catching a man who is younger and fastest then him.The Hunted is a good action movie, with two of the best actors for this gender and switching the landscape from an forest to the crowded city make the film more interesting to follow and keeps the spectator on the edge of the seat.