Ogunquit Performing Arts

Mailing Address

P.O. Box 1608
Ogunquit, ME 03907

Performance Venue

The S. Judson Dunaway Center
23 School St.
Ogunquit ME 

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In case of bad weather, the cancellation of a film or live performance will be listed on the website no later than 11 am on the day of the event.

Ogunquit Performing Arts

Performance Venue

The S. Judson Dunaway Center
23 School St.
Ogunquit ME 03907

In case of bad weather, the cancellation of a film or live performance will be listed on the website no later than 11 am on the day of the event.

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Classic Film: The Hunters

The Hunters is a 1958 big-screen American war/ adventure film loosely adapted from the novel, The Hunters, by James Salter.  Produced and directed by Dick Powell, it stars Robert Mitchum […]
The Hunters

The Hunters is a 1958 big-screen American war/ adventure film loosely adapted from the novel, The Hunters, by James Salter.  Produced and directed by Dick Powell, it stars Robert Mitchum as a flight commander during the Korean War, and Robert Wagner as a cocky young  pilot assigned to his flight.

Lee Philips, May Britt, Richard Egan, and John Gabriel complete the cast of this romantic adventure, which features spectacular flying sequences as well as interpersonal tensions on and off the ground.

Major Cleve “Iceman” Saville (Robert Mitchum), a veteran World War II fighter ace returns to combat in the Korean War, eager to fly an F-86 Sabre fighter. His commanding officer (Richard Egan) assigns him command of a flight. 

The Hunters

Among his pilots is a troubled, insecure, heavy-drinking pilot (Lee Philips), with whose neglected wife Mitchum is already in love.  Adding to his problems is the arrival of a brash new young replacement,  (Robert Wagner), who ignores command orders in the sky.

The film was produced and directed by Dick Powell.  According to Turner Classic Movies, “Twentieth Century-Fox’s submarine combat movie The Enemy Below was such a big hit in 1957 that the studio immediately assigned the film’s producer-director, Dick Powell, to another war movie: The Hunters (1958). Powell, of course, was also a big movie star, but his feature acting days were already behind him. In 1953, he had transitioned to a new career as a director and producer — though he would still occasionally act for television — with the fine suspense drama Split Second. The Hunters was his fifth and final big-screen directing effort.

“… Dick Powell sent Wendell Mayes’s script to Robert Mitchum, whom he had just directed in The Enemy Below — or, as Mitchum later recounted, Powell sent part of the script. Speaking to the London Sunday Express in 1978, Mitchum said, ‘Powell sent me 30 pages,…saying how good it was. And it seemed fine to me. I got to fly a fighter plane and spend a lot of time in the officers club in Japan. ‘And you can go to Japan and scout it out for a couple of weeks,’ he said. That sounded good, so I said ‘Yes.’ Then he sent me page 31. And I found out my plane crashed and I spent the rest of the film carrying some fellow through Korea on my back. ‘You ought to cast the part by the pound,’ I said. ‘Find some wisp. What’s Sinatra doing?’ But of course they saddled me with a hulk [Lee Philips] who got heavier by the minute and  I never got near Japan.’

The Hunters

“For the role of a young hotshot pilot named Lt. Ed Pell, Fox cast 27-year-old Robert Wagner, who reported to work on The Hunters immediately following his honeymoon with Natalie Wood. In his memoir, Wagner wrote that he ‘adored both [Powell and Mitchum]. Powell was one of the great guys of all time, and Mitchum and I became fast friends…’ ”   Jeremy Arnold, TCM

“The brash detachment of young Mr. Wagner, of all people, in the role of a jive-talking killer ace, steals the picture from everybody, excluding the jet planes.  The sight of these silver-bellied beauties streaking across the sky, or barking away in counter-attack, may be reward enough for many customers. The sequence of the Americans roaring toward the enemy under a carpet of smoky contrails is thrilling.”  New York Times

Enjoy this film on the wall-sized screen of the
Dunaway Center, 23 School Street, Ogunquit.
Admission, Parking and Popcorn are free.