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Poursuite en Arizona

Original title: The Tracker
  • TV Movie
  • 1988
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
566
YOUR RATING
Poster for video release, 1 sheet video release movie poster
DramaWestern

After a series of vicious crimes by a renegade group of cowboys, led by "Red Jack" Stilwell, a legendary tracker, Noble Adams is pulled out of retirement to capture Stilwell, dead or alive. ... Read allAfter a series of vicious crimes by a renegade group of cowboys, led by "Red Jack" Stilwell, a legendary tracker, Noble Adams is pulled out of retirement to capture Stilwell, dead or alive. Reluctantly, needing more men, he allows his son, Tom to tag along, revealing to Tom a who... Read allAfter a series of vicious crimes by a renegade group of cowboys, led by "Red Jack" Stilwell, a legendary tracker, Noble Adams is pulled out of retirement to capture Stilwell, dead or alive. Reluctantly, needing more men, he allows his son, Tom to tag along, revealing to Tom a whole brutal side of ruthlessness Noble thought he left behind.

  • Director
    • John Guillermin
  • Writer
    • Kevin Jarre
  • Stars
    • Kris Kristofferson
    • Scott Wilson
    • Mark Moses
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    566
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Guillermin
    • Writer
      • Kevin Jarre
    • Stars
      • Kris Kristofferson
      • Scott Wilson
      • Mark Moses
    • 17User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Kris Kristofferson
    Kris Kristofferson
    • Noble Adams
    Scott Wilson
    Scott Wilson
    • John 'Red Jack' Stillwell
    Mark Moses
    Mark Moses
    • Tom Adams
    David Huddleston
    David Huddleston
    • Lane Crawford
    John Quade
    John Quade
    • Lomax
    Don Swayze
    Don Swayze
    • Brewer
    Geoffrey Blake
    Geoffrey Blake
    • Miller
    Leon Rippy
    Leon Rippy
    • Chub Dumont
    Ernie Lively
    Ernie Lively
    • Bob
    Karen Kopins
    Karen Kopins
    • Sarah Bolton
    Celia Xavier
    Celia Xavier
    • Inez
    Jennifer Snyder
    • Mary Bolton
    Brynn Thayer
    Brynn Thayer
    • Lottie Adams
    Jose Rey Toledo
    • Redondo
    Jeff Celentano
    Jeff Celentano
    • Lon
    • (as Jeff Weston)
    Kip Allen
    • Cornishman
    John Barks
    • Drunk
    Michael D. Blum
    • Bartender
    • Director
      • John Guillermin
    • Writer
      • Kevin Jarre
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.2566
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    Featured reviews

    7dworldeater

    Solid western

    The Tracker is a made for HBO western movie starring Kris Kristopher son.Kistopherson is perfect for this role and in my opinion, very underrated as an actor. He must come out of retirement to track down a vicious gang. Scott Wilson is great also as the leader of the gang as well as a psychotic holy roller. The story moves along at a steady pacea looks great as well. The acting and characterization is also pretty solid and has the right amount of action and gunplay. Overall, I thought The Tracker was quite good and should please most fans of the genre. It definitely is deserving of more fanfare and was a well made western.
    Wizard-8

    Solid western

    I'm not sure why I put off seeing this western for so long - maybe because it was made for cable, and I thought a cable western couldn't compare to a big screen western. Anyway, I am glad that I finally saw this. Like many modern day westerns, this one has a lot of elements that make it raw and tough. But interestingly, the general tone isn't that. Instead, there is a creepy tone playing in the background for the most part. It's a creepiness that really makes it feel like anything bad could happen at any moment, and it's really effective. Elsewhere, the movie comes across as a professional exercise, ranging from being well acted to having good production values. Are there any flaws? Well, the only real flaw I found was that the script is (mostly) pretty predictable. But at least it's handled in a first class manner that will make it all the same pleasing to western fans.
    6ma-cortes

    Decent and attractive western in which tracker Kris Kristofferson pursues mercilessly ruthless killers

    Notable TV Western with Kris Kristofferson's stoic acting as a tough tracker who sets out in pursuit some cruel outlaws . A series of vicious crimes by a renegade bunch of gunfighters , led by "Red Jack" Stilwell (Scott Wilson) and his henchmen (John Quade , Don Swayze..) lead to a legendary tracker , Noble Adams (Kris Kristofferson) , is pulled out of retirement to capture Stilwell , dead or alive , being accompanied by the local sheriff (David Huddleston) . Reluctantly, needing more men, he allows his son Tom (Mark Moses) to ride along. They track down the heinous villain and meet a band of nasty bounty hunters 8Leon Rippley , among others) .As the group sets after them , as Stitwell leads his men in a manhunt throughout a long and risked journey . Along the way , they manage to escape from the ominous gang and then things change . He thought his days of violence had ended... But the battle between good and evil is never over. Noble thought he left behind.

    Thrilling Western in traditional style in which a two-fisted tracker joins his son and a sheriff to chase a really dangerous killer and his hoodlums . A charming and agreeable Western with good performance by the protagonist quartet : Kris Kristopherson , Mark Moses , David Huddleston and the extremely nasty Scott Wilson . This fine Western contains thrills , adequate action set-pieces , chases , go riding , and taking place impressive quick-draws . This special Western picture with breathtaking duels concerns three pursuers pit heinous bandits resulting in a deadly gun-battle and it turns out to be an enjoyable as well as appropriate homage to the traditional style Western . There's a particular family relationship , father : Kris Kristofferson and son : Mark Moses , revealing to Tom a whole brutal side of ruthlessness . This ¨The Tracker (1988)¨ contains strong performances augmented by blazing guns , hobbled by an uneven writing . Nevertheless, it doesn't have much interest at times , neither intensity enough , though Kris Kristofferson captures his role pretty well playing an expert and silent gunfighter who proves his excellent skills against the violent band . John Guillermin's slick direction , awesome interpretation and interesting story and script from Kevin Jarre enhance interest in this television nice Western . Standing out the great Kris Kristofferson as the merciless tracker who he seeks justice and vengeance . Star Kris Kristofferson is a detached figure in Western genre , being one of its main representatives , performing a lot of them in the Seventies , Eighties and Nineties , as cinema as TV , such as : ¨The Last Days of Frank and Jesse James¨ , ¨Pat Garret and Billy the Kid¨ , ¨Heaven's Gate¨, ¨Outlaw Justice¨ , ¨Dead man's gun¨ , ¨Stagecoach¨ and modern Western as ¨Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia¨ or ¨Convoy¨ and several others . Adding other notorious secondaries as John Quade , Don Swayze , Geoffrey Blake , Leon Rippley , Karen Kopins and the recently deceased Ernie Lively , Blake Lively's father.

    There's a magnificently atmospheric cinematography , heightened by professional cameraman George Tirl providing vivid photography from Durango and Silverton , Narrow Gauge Railroad, Colorado, Bonanza Creek Ranch Santa Fe, Galisteo , San Ildefonso , New Mexico, Diablo Canyon, Santa Fe, New Mexico . The motion picture was competently directed by John Guillermin . This Brit craftsman filmmaker directed several films of all kinds of genres , getting several hits and some flops , as he made the following ones : "The Blue Max" , "Walz of the Toreadors" , "Never Let Go" , "Death on the Nile" , "King Kong" , "King Kong lives" , "Towering inferno" , among others . Rating : 6.5/10 . Better than average . Essential and indispensable watching for Western enthusiasts . The flick will appeal to Kris Kristofferson fans .
    rrichr

    Tougher Than Nails

    The Western never quite seems to die, despite repeated pronouncements to that effect. Westerns are not cool, although their heroes can certainly be. But so what? Cool is far too transient to be taken seriously by anyone but marketers and adolescents. For the latter, knowing what's cool is merely practice for knowing something but without the burden of actual knowledge. It's a place to be for people who, in essence, know almost nothing and need something to grip. So, instead of dying, the Western seems merely to periodically cop some Z's than awaken again to take a currently acceptable shape. Witness HBO's critically well-received new series, Deadwood. What's the secret here? I think it's simple. The Western is simply too innately and indelibly cinematic to completely die. Also, if one has a knack for location shooting, westerns can be relatively easy to make - at least as easy as any feature film can be, although they can be hard to make well. For example, Lawrence Kasdan's Silverado, despite its excellent cast, top-shelf production values, and sprinkling of good moments, never quite managed to escape a certain perfunctoriness. Compare it to a similar ensemble work in the genre: Clint Eastwood's superb Unforgiven, and you can begin to get the almost indefinable sense of what makes a Western right. The Western requires a certain element of restraint to really work; restraint on all levels, behind and in front of the camera. The made-for-TV, The Tracker, also screened as Dead or Alive, is a blueprint for that restraint.

    The Tracker is a simple manhunt story set in the canyon country of southern Utah. If you've ever spent time in the high country, especially when autumn is drawing its final breaths, with the first major snowfall just a hair-trigger pull away, you'll know how beautiful that time of the season is. A buttery light seems to glow out from everywhere: rocks, dust, the explosion of golden Cottonwood leaves. Into this beautiful and unforgiving world Kris Kristofferson's almost supernaturally tough Marshal Noble Adams pursues his quarry. And what a great quarry it is. The under-sung Scott Wilson plays Jack Stillwell, a bible-quoting maniac, kidnapper, and murderer; a cross between Donald Pleasance's vicious lay preacher in Will Penny and the Wild Bill character in The Green Mile. Stillwell is on the loose, out of his gourd, and loving every minute of his headlong ride to perdition. Marshal Adams, his longtime friend and deputy (the ursine David Huddleston), and Adams's son, on leave from school `in the East', whom the Marshal deputizes to give him some real work to do, set out in pursuit of Stillwell, and they're not coming back without him.

    The story swings between Jack Stillwell's fever-pitch lunacy and Marshal Adams' granitic resolve. Kris Kristofferson was born to be a western lead; always displaying the entire palette of mood required for the work. His Billy the Kid is, essentially, definitive although I remain very fond of Emilio Estevez' wild-eyed embodiment in Young Guns. Despite the relatively unknown status of this film, Kristofferson's Noble Adams is one of the finest western characters ever portayed: American Gothic from the Dark Side in service of The Light and is also some of this actor's best work ever. Trailing Stillwell into country where, as a younger man, Adams lost his wife, whom it is clear that he dearly loved, pulls the the Marshal across hallowed ground to boot. Tragi-comic relief occurs in the form of grim humor when a pack of bounty hunters, knockabout cowpokes also tracking Stillwell and completely out of their collective depth, cross Adams's trail. They get one warning to drop their act which, of course, they ignore in a manner entirely consistent with a group intelligence just a notch or two above the pathetics who rode with Robert Ryan's Deke Thornton in the Wild Bunch.

    Adams' weapon of choice is a long-barreled Sharps. The Marshal shoots well and the outcome is somewhat foregone, yet one still emerges with a certain compassion for the dull-witted.

    And there you have it. And it's all you need. As a film, The Tracker is a very solid B movie; a perfectly good place for a western to be. But as a genre piece, once the action departs the somewhat too-manicured 1880's railhead set, it's right down the pipe: compact, credible, nonsense-free, poignant, and engrossing. Any fan of the genre should collect it.
    8FightingWesterner

    Great Eighties Western

    Renegade Mormon psychopath (!) Scott Wilson and fellow prisoners, including John Quade and Don Swayze, bust out of prison and go on a bloody rampage. Famous retired tracker Kris Kristofferson is pressed back into service by lawman David Huddleston to help catch them and ends up bringing his eastern educated son. Upon hearing that Kristofferson is tracking them, Wilson ups the ante by kidnapping two young girls.

    This is one grim, eighties style western that never lets up in terms of action and suspense. The teleplay by Kevin Jarre (who also wrote Tombstone) has a lot of psychological depth, with Kristofferson revealing to his son a different, more violent side and in turn teaching the young lawyer how to be a man.

    It's good to see character actor David Huddleston in a non-comedic hero role. Scott Wilson is also good as the pitifully disturbed heavy, probably his best role since In Cold Blood. Kristofferson gives a better performance here than in Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid.

    Director John Guillerman also scored big with faux spaghetti western El Condor, with Jim Brown and Lee Van Cleef. He does a great job capturing the great natural beauty as well as the dark side of the old west.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Last film directed by John Guillermin.
    • Goofs
      Several times during the course of the movie, aircraft con trails are clearly visible in the sky. At the time this movie takes place, the Wright brothers had not yet flown their Flyer.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 26, 1988 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Der gnadenlose Jäger
    • Filming locations
      • Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, Colorado, USA(railroad scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Eaves Movie Ranch
      • HBO Pictures
      • Incorporated Television Company (ITC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $4,800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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