Scavenger Hunt

Scavenger Hunt

Scavenger Hunt film poster
Directed by Michael Schultz
Produced by Steven A. Vail
Screenplay by Steven A. Vail
Henry Harper
Story by Steven A. Vail
Starring Richard Benjamin
James Coco
Scatman Crothers
Ruth Gordon
Cloris Leachman
Cleavon Little
Roddy McDowall
Robert Morley
Richard Mulligan
Tony Randall
Dirk Benedict
Willie Aames
Stephanie Faracy
Stephen Furst
Richard Masur
Music by Billy Goldenberg
Cinematography Ken Lamkin
Edited by Christopher Holmes
Production
company
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • December 21, 1979 (1979-12-21)
Running time
116 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $7 million[1]

Scavenger Hunt is a 1979 comedy film with a large ensemble cast.[2]

The ensemble cast includes Richard Benjamin, James Coco, Scatman Crothers, Ruth Gordon, Cloris Leachman, Cleavon Little, Roddy McDowall, Robert Morley, Richard Mulligan, Tony Randall, Dirk Benedict, Willie Aames, Stephanie Faracy, Stephen Furst and Richard Masur.[2] The film was directed by Michael Schultz,[2] and released by 20th Century Fox.[2] It includes an appearance by Arnold Schwarzenegger,[2] and features cameos by rock legend Meat Loaf[2] and horror-movie icon Vincent Price.[2]

Filming took place in and around San Diego, California, incorporating local landmarks such as Balboa Park and the Centre City Building.

Plot

Milton Parker (Vincent Price), an eccentric game inventor, dies after losing a video game with his nurse. Parker's greedy and estranged relatives show up at his mansion for the reading of his will. Lawyer Charles Bernstein tells them the winner of a scavenger hunt will inherit the $200 million estate. The potential beneficiaries form five teams and get involved in various misadventures.

The five teams consist of:

  1. Parker's son-in-law Henry Motley and his four children.
  2. The servants: French cook Henri, valet Jenkins, limo driver Jackson and French maid Babbette.
  3. Dim-witted taxi driver Marvin Dummitz.
  4. Parker's widowed sister Mildred Carruthers, her attorney Stuart Sellsome, and her son Georgie.
  5. Nephews Kenny and Jeff Stevens, and Mildred's step-daughter Lisa.

Each group is given a list containing clues to acquire 100 items with various point values ranging from 5 to 100 points. The items are to be acquired by any means necessary, with the exception of being purchased. They are to be placed in five different pens on the grounds of the estate. The winner of the scavenger hunt will be the person or team to acquire the most points by 5 p.m. that day.

Chaos and carnage ensue, with scavengers returning occasionally to the Parker mansion to deposit items under the supervision of Bernstein and the scorekeeper, Cornfeld.

Mildred, Stuart and Georgie's adventure has them trying to win a stuffed toy bear at a local carnival, trying to haul a heavy safe out of Stuart's office building, stealing the false teeth of a Native American and stealing other people's items. Stuart gets roughed up by a motorcycle gang led by Scum (Meat Loaf) after attempting to steal a stuffed fox tail off one of the gang's motorcycles. Late in the game, the team steals items from the servants and the Stevens/Lisa teams.

The servants' adventure has them trying to steal a toilet from a fancy hotel, partaking in a robbery at a convenience store to steal a cash register and getting locked in a university laboratory while trying to steal a microscope.

Kenny, Jeff and Lisa's adventure has them "borrowing" items such as a clown head from a Jack in the Box, recruiting an obese Duane, although they soon discard him and pick up another obese person. A bulletproof vest is borrowed from a self-defense-obsessed lady named Arvilla (Ruth Gordon) and they acquire "laughing gas," steal a uniform from a motorcycle cop, and get stuck in a football team's locker room trying to steal a helmet.

Dummittz' adventure has him trying unsuccessfully to steal a Rolls Royce front grill and getting run over many times while trying to replicate an insurance scam he witnesses. A bridal shop security guard named Sam catches him attempting to steal a bridal dress. Sam joins the hunt. Together they steal a knight's suit of armor from a museum, with Marvin dressing up as a mummy and Sam putting on the armor. Sam is stolen by the Mildred-Stuart-Georgie team. Marvin then teams up with obese friend Merl.

Motley's adventure has him attempting to make his kids proud while acquiring a beehive, a life preserver and a parachute. Motley tries to get a medicine ball from a gym and to impress the instructor Lars (Arnold Schwarzenegger), which gets Motley thrown out of a second floor window trying to catch a medicine ball thrown to him.

Each team steals an ostrich from the San Diego Zoo, much to the dismay of the zookeeper (Avery Schreiber).

It leads to a climactic car chase back to the Parker mansion. The three remaining teams give up their individual chances to win in order to help Kenny, Jeff and Lisa win against the unethical Mildred-Stuart-Georgie team. With seconds to go, Sam, still wearing the armor, crawls out of the Carruthers' pen and into the other pen to win the contest for the Stevens brothers and Lisa. The victors decide to share their new wealth with the rest, except for Mildred, Stuart and Georgie.

Cast

Reception

Scavenger Hunt did not receive good reviews. The Chicago Tribune's Gene Siskel termed the film "excruciatingly dull", observing that "Coco and Little disconnect a toilet; Randall gets knocked down by a safe; Benjamin steals items from another team. Isn't that a scream? Are your sides splitting?"[3]

Home media

Scavenger Hunt was first issued on video cassette (both Beta and VHS formats) in 1983 by CBS/FOX Home Video. It was deleted in the mid-1990s. This movie was never issued on any videodisc format (CED or Laserdisc), and finally released January 10, 2017 on DVD and Blu-ray.

References

  1. Aubrey Solomon, Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History, Scarecrow Press, 1989 p259
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Maslin, Janet (December 25, 1979). "Scavenger Hunt (1979) Screen: 'Scavenger Hunt' Is a Comedy About Greed". The New York Times.
  3. Siskel, Gene (December 28, 1979). "'Scavenger' not worth looking for". Chicago Tribune. p. A9. Retrieved 11 October 2016.

See also

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