Hatari! (1962)

Movie · 1962 · Adventure, Comedy, Action · 2h 37m · English

Curator score: 4.7/10 (15.8K ratings)

Hatari means Fun! Hatari means Adventure! Hatari means Thrills!

Overview

A female wildlife photographer arrives on an East African reservation where a group of men trap wild animals for zoos and circuses.

Ratings

Director

Howard Hawks

Production

Paramount Pictures, Malabar

Cast

John Wayne, Hardy Krüger, Elsa Martinelli, Red Buttons, Gérard Blain, Bruce Cabot, Michèle Girardon, Valentin de Vargas, Eduard Franz, Jon Chevron, Sam Harris, Cathy Lewis, Eric Rungren, Henry Scott, Emmett Smith, Jack Williams

Where to watch

Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads

Curator Review

Verdict

A warm, loose, and unusually charming adventure-comedy that values atmosphere, camaraderie, and animal-action spectacle over plot. It’s very much a hangout movie, with gorgeous location work, easy chemistry, and a playful sense of professional teamwork, though its colonial-era attitudes and meandering length may test some viewers.

Best for

  • fans of Howard Hawks and classic studio-era adventure
  • viewers who enjoy relaxed ensemble hangout movies
  • people drawn to location shooting, practical action, and animal spectacle
  • fans of breezy romantic-comedy energy inside an adventure frame

Skip if

  • you want a tight, plot-driven story
  • you’re sensitive to dated colonial or exoticizing attitudes
  • you dislike long runtime with low narrative urgency
  • you prefer modern pacing or polished contemporary adventure

Overview

Hatari! is one of those movies that seems to run on pure camaraderie. The plot is simple enough, but Hawks is far more interested in the rhythms of work, flirtation, and shared routine than in suspense, and that gives the film its easygoing charm. The animal-catching sequences are lively, but the real pleasure is watching the group settle into a social ecosystem that feels casual, professional, and oddly affectionate.

Worth noting

It’s also a beautiful piece of location filmmaking, full of sun-baked landscapes, practical stunts, and the kind of physical staging Hawks made look effortless. The movie can feel shaggy, and some material is dated in ways that are hard to ignore, but the overall mood is so inviting that the looseness becomes part of the appeal.

Bottom line

If you like classic Hollywood movies that feel like they’re hanging out with you rather than pushing you along, this is an easy recommendation. It’s less about plot than presence, and that’s exactly why it endures.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Peter Labuza (4★) · 214 likes

Quentin Tarantino always calls Rio Bravo a "hang out" movie, but there's way more hanging out in this film and barely a narrative motivation to hold onto (yes they have to complete the safari, but everyone seems pretty relaxed about this). In doing so, some scenes are kind of padding for the 2.5+ hour running time (a gag with ostriches, a not particularly offensive but still in bad taste tribal sequence with Dallas). Even if it does feel like a… more Quentin Tarantino always calls Rio Bravo a "hang out" movie, but there's way more hanging out in this film and barely a narrative motivation to hold onto (yes they have to complete the safari, but everyone seems pretty relaxed about this). In doing so, some scenes are kind of padding for the 2.5+ hour running time (a gag with ostriches, a not particularly offensive but still in bad taste tribal sequence with Dallas). Even if it does feel like a… more

comrade_yui (5★) · 185 likes

such a warm and inviting adventure, it wraps around you like a comfy fresh blanket. a 157 minute howard hawks hang-out safari movie is basically catnip for me at this point. i love this atmosphere, i love these visuals, i love these characters, i love this director. i wish i could live within this film forever, it's a never-ending buffet of the tastiest cinematic pleasures.

Bruno Andrade (5★) · 161 likes

Há um ou dois meses escrevi o seguinte: Apenas dois cineastas que surgiram na geração dos anos 1970 podem ser considerados inequivocamente clássicos, John Milius e Michael Cimino, e apenas a partir das suas obras é possível se falar de um novo classicismo, pela simples razão de que eles, como Hawks, Ford, Walsh, Vidor, DeMille, trabalharam o mito a partir do seu interior, trabalharam o mito de dentro do mito, um pouco como os vaqueiros de Red River e The…

comrade_yui (5★) · 114 likes

hawks films are instructive as to how you can do interesting things solely through smart blocking and cutting on gesture, which isn't flashy, but when done correctly can give your movie a strong measured consistency in which subtle things can occur in the margins: i'll point out to you how often he'll start a scene in an establishing shot, showing us the orientation of a group of characters, how they relate to each other in a space, and then instead… more hawks films are instructive as to how you can do interesting things solely through smart blocking and cutting on gesture, which isn't flashy, but when done correctly can give your movie a strong measured consistency in which subtle things can occur in the margins: i'll point out to you how often he'll start a scene in an establishing shot, showing us the orientation of a group of characters, how they relate to each other in a space, and then instead… more

Jude (4.5★) · 108 likes

a series of impeccable minor scenes strung together with nothing but chill vibes and beautiful landscapes. strangely progressive in how it imagines this utopian cross-cultural space united by intangible codes of (paradoxically gender-neutral) masculinity and professionalism, even if its notions of everyone and everything unfamiliar to the American male are hopelessly exoticizing. surely the warmest and most pleasurable two-and-a-half hours you can spend watching very little happen

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Topics

adventure-comedy, ensemble cast, hangout movie, classic Hollywood, African location shoot, practical stunts, romantic banter, workplace camaraderie, animal action, 1960s cinema

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