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HAWK THE SLAYER
Rating

UK. 1980.
Director – Terry Marcel, Screenplay – Terry Marcel & Harry Robertson, Producer/Music – Harry Robertson, Photography/Photographic Effects – Paul Beeson, Special Effects – Effects Associates, Art Direction – Michael Pickwood. Production Company – Chips Productions.
Cast:
John Terry (Hawk), Jack Palance (Voltan), Bernard Bresslaw (Gort), Peter O’Farrell (Baldin), Ray Charleson (Crow), Morgan Sheppard (Ranulf), Cheryl Campbell (Sister Monica), Shane Briant (Drogo), Patricia Quinn (Witch Woman), Annette Crosbie (Abbess), Catriona MacColl (Elaine), Ferdy Mayne (The King)

Plot: The evil Voltan, who hides his disfigured face behind a steel half-mask, demands that his father the King show him the source of his power and kills him when he refuses. As he dies, the King gives his other son Hawk the source of the power that Voltan seeks – his sword and the elven mindstone that gives the wielder mental control over it. Now years later Voltan takes the Abbess of Caddonbury hostage and demands two thousand pieces of gold as ransom. When the church refuses to pay, the Abbess’s people ask the help of Hawk. And so Hawk gathers a ragtag band of adventurers – a giant, an elven archer and a dwarf – to stop Voltan.
This was an early entry in the brief mid-80s sword-and-sorcery stakes, just before it peaked with the likes of Excalibur (1981) (which also starred John Terry, playing King Arthur) and Conan the Barbarian (1982). Hawk the Slayer has been undeniably made on the cheap – all the sets are outdoors, none of the villages or towns are ever depicted. And the effects come down around the level of the average 1970s episode of Doctor Who (1963-89) – all shabby coloured and flashing lights, cheap animation effects and phosphorescent snowstorms, and a really silly magic sequence where soldiers are disposed of by Silly Putty. There is little to the plot. Potentially interesting are the band of sidekicks – an elf, a dwarf and a giant – standard fantasy archetypes but which the cinema had at that point yet to tap for its own ends. But any potential interest here is traded in for lowbrow humour. Director Terry Marcel tiresomely overuses slow-motion camerawork and adds an entirely anachronistic synthesizer score. The most dreadful thing about the film though is the ludicrously campy performance from Jack Palance, who grandly chews the scenery with the peculiar brand of asthmatic villainy he has mastered that requires he take a breath in between every syllable. Director Terry Marcel later returned to the sword and sorcery genre with Prisoners of the Lost Universe (1983) and then made the campy adventure film Jane and the Lost City (1987), adapted from the popular newspaper strip.
 

Copyright Richard Scheib 1990