Game for Vultures

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Game for Vultures
AGameForVultures1979Poster.jpg
American poster
Directed by James Fargo
Written by Philip Baird
Based ona novel by Michael Hartmann
Produced by Hazel Adair
Starring Richard Harris
Richard Roundtree
Denholm Elliott
Joan Collins
Cinematography Alex Thomson
Edited by Peter Tanner
Music by Tony Duhig
Jon Field
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Ster-Kinekor Film Distribution Co (South Africa)
Release date
  • 13 September 1979 (1979-09-13)
Running time
113 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$5 million [1]

Game for Vultures is a 1979 British thriller film starring Richard Harris, Joan Collins and Richard Roundtree. It was directed by James Fargo and based on the 1975 novel with the same name by Michael Hartmann set during the Rhodesian Bush War.

Contents

Plot

During the late 1970s, as the Rhodesian Bush War reaches its height, arms dealer David Swansey (Richard Harris) is a "sanctions busting" specialist, one of many who keeps the Rhodesian Security Forces supplied through black market purchases despite an extensive international arms embargo. Swansey's latest assignment is to arrange the illicit purchase of military helicopters, which he acquires in the form of surplus Bell UH-1s being auctioned from a United States Air Force base in West Germany. However, word of this transaction is soon leaked to a foreign office of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), which applies strong political pressure in an attempt to kill the deal in its cradle. Due to this, the helicopters are barred from reaching Rhodesia and instead diverted to neighbouring South West Africa, then administered by South Africa.

Meanwhile, Gideon Marunga (Roundtree) is a guerrilla fighter in the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA), ZANU's armed wing. Marunga learns that the South African authorities are going to allow Swansey and the Rhodesian Special Air Service to stage a mock raid on the airfield where the helicopters are being stored, with the intention of loading them onto Douglas C-47 Dakotas bound for Rhodesia. On the day of the raid, Marunga arrives at the airfield and stalls the Rhodesian troops, while his accomplices succeed in destroying half of the helicopters. In the ensuing battle he comes face to face with Swansey, and the two men share a weary moment of reflection on their stalemate before abruptly parting ways.

The international fallout from the helicopter affair exposes Swansey's illegal activities and he finds himself unable to continue conducting business outside Rhodesia. He decides to permanently settle there and pursue a normal life, but is immediately conscripted into the security forces. The film closes as Marunga and Swansey confront each other on the battlefield againthis time through the sights of their rifles.

Cast

Production

Game for Vultures was the first British film about the Rhodesian Bush War. [1]

The film was mostly shot in South Africa, near Pretoria and Johannesburg. [2] [3] It was decided not to film in Rhodesia itself because of security concerns and the potential violation of sanctions. [4]

"I'm not a politician", said the producer Hazel Adair. The director James Fargo concurred: "I'm not a political person at all. I never thought about Africa until I started to make a film... The audience will come away with the idea that neither side is right." [5]

"It's a movie in which there are no real bad guys or good guys", said Fargo. "Nobody really wins in the end and everybody loses, like in the real Rhodesia." [1]

During filming in South Africa, Roundtree tried to purchase some alcoholic drinks but was refused service because of his skin colour. [5]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Tony Duhig and Jon Field, who together comprised the British group Jade Warrior.

Reception

The film was meant to have its world premiere in Johannesburg on 22 June 1979. However the film was banned by South African government censors, who deemed it a threat to state security. [2]

Game for Vultures was not a massive commercial or critical success. Some critics condemned the apparent bias of the plot, which ran counter to the traditionally accepted view of Rhodesia's predominantly white government as being a racially oppressive one, while its black nationalist opponents were widely regarded as freedom fighters representing a just cause.

In addition, this film was overtaken by actual events, as the war came to an end before the film reached wide distribution. [6] It saw some success in video sales, on VHS and in a DVD Region 2 release.

Versions, censorship, and home media

The original cinema release of the film was exactly 113 minutes, having been awarded an X certificate by the British Board of Film Censorship. This version was initially released on PAL VHS and Betamax video cassette formats by RCA Columbia in 1986, running to approximately 109 minutes due to PAL speed-up, with an 18 certificate. In 2006 it was cut to approximately 103 minutes for home release (equivalent to around 107m 18s in the cinema) with a 15 certificate. [7] Cuts include an injured soldier being run over by the disabled Land Rover during the early ambush, as well as the scene towards the end in which Danny Batten confronts and stabs his sister, before he himself is killed with a garden fork, which may have been removed to achieve the lower certificate, while other cuts appear to be for other reasons, such as when Raglan Thistle attends a pro-Zimbabwe demonstration in Hyde Park. Subsequent home and VOD releases have been this cut version.

Related Research Articles

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Zimbabwe Rhodesia, alternatively known as Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, also informally known as Zimbabwe or Rhodesia, was a short-lived sovereign state that existed from 1 June 1979 to 18 April 1980, though lacked international recognition. Zimbabwe Rhodesia was preceded by another state named the Republic of Rhodesia and was briefly under a British-supervised transitional government sometimes referred to as a reestablished Southern Rhodesia, which according to British constitutional theory had remained the lawful government in the area after Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI) in 1965. About three months later, the re-established colony of Southern Rhodesia was granted internationally-recognized independence within the Commonwealth as the Republic of Zimbabwe.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Internal Settlement</span> 1978 agreement in Rhodesia

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rhodesian Air Force</span> Military unit

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Operation Hectic was a planned operation to be conducted by the Rhodesian Security Forces. The plan was designed as an underpinning operation to Operation Quartz. The plan was intended to be used to assassinate Robert Mugabe and other high ranking ZANU leaders at their headquarters. The operation was cancelled three hours before it was due to start.

Major-General G. A. D. "Andrew" Rawlins was a Rhodesian Army officer. He served in the Rhodesian African Rifles during the pre-independence years when Rhodesia was part of the British Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. He remained in the unit following Rhodesia's unilateral declaration of independence in 1965. He was a proponent of psychological warfare in the early years of the Rhodesian Bush War but his proposals were not acted upon. In 1967 he recommended other changes in tactics to the Rhodesian chief of staff, Brigadier Keith Coster. Rawlins retired from the army as a brigadier in 1976 but was brought back to command, as a major general, the newly formed Guard Force. This unit was established to defend the protected villages, where the Rhodesian government had moved black civilians to isolate them from the guerrillas. He left this role in February 1977 to become the Rhodesian Army's director of psychological warfare. Rawlins left the army in 1979 as the Rhodesian Bush War was drawing to a close and ahead of the territory's transition into Zimbabwe.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Nicholson, William F. (28 October 1978). "Filming is education for cast of 'Vultures'". Chicago Tribune. p. n16.
  2. 1 2 "BRIEFLY South Africa bans film". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. 1 June 1979. p. 13..
  3. Bart Mills (3 June 1979). "THE 'AFRICAN': The Drums Are Beating in them World's Movie Studios for Black and White 'Westerns' Drums Are Beating". The Washington Post. p. L1.
  4. Rhodesia war film under way, The Spokesman-Review , October 30, 1978
  5. 1 2 Mills, Bart. (17 June 1979). "Filmmakers trek to Africa in search of screen adventures". Chicago Tribune. p. g14.
  6. "Bishop ushers in new rule". The Irish Times. Dublin. 1 June 1979. p. 9.
  7. "Game for Vultures".