Producer
Arthur R. Dubs spent the ’70s making gentle movies about gentle people living
in North America’s snowy frontiers, including the Wilderness Family
trilogy. While Dubs’ productions are distinguished by handsome nature
photography, the
generation of substantial narratives was not Dubs’ strong suit. Therefore, it’s peculiar that Dubs opted to make a fictionalized movie about Albert
Johnson, a Canadian mountain man who was accused of murder and then became the
target of an epic manhunt, eventually earning the moniker “The Mad Trapper of
Rat River.” In Dubs’ hilariously whitewashed version of the story, Challenge to Be Free, the leading
character known only as “Trapper” (Mike Mazurki) is a harmless recluse who lives
in the mountains of Alaska, catching only what he needs to survive while
frolicking with—and looking after—assorted furry friends. To give a sense of
the movie’s tone, one long sequence features Trapper making flapjacks and
feeding them to an elk, all to the accompaniment of cornpone voiceover
narration and syrupy background music. In fact, the entire first half-hour of the movie feels like
a second-rate Disney travelogue. Then the picture presents Trapper’s run-in
with the law as a simple misunderstanding that gets out of hand—never mind that
Trapper kills someone with a shotgun and flees the scene. The remainder the film comprises Trapper’s long flight from pursuing Mounties, culminating
with his dramatic standoff atop a snowy mountain. Despite the presence of
impressive location photography and countless shots of wild animals in what appear
to be their natural habitats, the flick is deadly boring. Nearly all the
dialogue was dubbed during post-production, giving a disjointed feel; the
strain of squeezing a dark story into a G-rated paradigm drains the narrative
of vitality; and Mazurki is an amiable bear of a man but nowhere near a movie
star, in terms of acting chops and charisma. The story of “The Mad Trapper of
Rat River” might be fascinating, but it’s nowhere to be found in the cloying and lifeless Challenge to Be Free.
Challenge to Be Free: LAME
1 comment:
The same story was filmed with Death Hunt in 1981.
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