THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME
This 1932 film runs for just over one hour but manages to pack quite a punch. There's not a moment wasted. A short initial scene on a yacht introduces us to Rainsford, a big game hunter, played by Joel McCrea. He's asked to empathise with the hunted, to which he confidently asserts that he will always be the hunter, so that's the theme of the film introduced as well. Then the yacht is shipwrecked, and only Rainsford survives, washed up on an island in which the only habitation is a sinister mansion owned by the equally sinister Count Zaroff (memorably played by Leslie Banks). At least, I found him sinister but Rainsford is surprisingly chilled out, all things considered. There are two other guests, a brother and sister, Martin and Eve, who coincidentally or not have also suffered a shipwreck. Rainsford isn't bright enough to realise that Zaroff might be relocating warning lights so as to deliberately cause shipwrecks. Nor...