The Beastmaster
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Don Coscarelli
Marc Singer
Ralph Strait
Tanya Roberts
Rip Torn
John Amos
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
The son of a king, Dar is ripped from his mother's womb by the cruel sorcerer Maax. Maax's plan to sacrifice the infant is thwarted by a villager who intervenes and saves Dar, raising him as his own son and teaching him to fight while observing the boy's remarkable ability to communicate with animals. When Maax's warriors attack the village, killing Dar's father figure, Dar swears vengeance. He is helped in his mission by one of his biological father's royal guards, and, through use of his telepathic power, an eagle, a panther and two ferrets. Along the way, he falls in love with the slave girl, Kiri.
Director
Don Coscarelli
Cast
Marc Singer
Ralph Strait
Tanya Roberts
Rip Torn
John Amos
Josh Milrad
Gary Mclarty
Eddy Donno
Kim Tabet
Hank Hooker
Paul Reynolds
Bruce Barbour
Vincent Deadrick
Jeremy Whelan
Tony Epper
Tim Dunlavey
Billy Jayne
Richard Humphreys
Daniel Zormeier
Don Heyn
Ben Hammer
Mike Kirton
Fess Reynolds
Dale Shawver
Rod Loomis
Janet Demay
Thomas J Huff
Eddie Hice
Mick Thibodeau
Hugh Armstrong
Janet Jones
Freddie Hice
George C Scott
Larry Randles
Linda Smith
Vanna Bonta
Chris Kellogg
Jim Driggers
Henry Carbo
Diamond Farnsworth
Jonathan Gravish
Monty Simons
Crew
Virginia Aalko
Linda Lou Agnelli
John Alcott
Conrad E Angone
Victor Anselmo
Nader Atassi
Lester Berman
Lester Berman
Donald P Borchers
Steve Boyum
Hank Calia
Tara Candoli
Michael Cheselka
Alf Clausen
Paul Clay
Beth Conwell
Erik Cord
Don Coscarelli
Bill Cruse
Kerrie Cullen
David Decarlo
Frank Demarco
Phillip Dennis
Jim Dodson
David Ellis
Gary Epper
Jeannie Epper
Carl Richard Fontana
David Franco
William G Gage
Roger George
Chuck Gordon
Richard Graves
Norman Griffin
Thomas M. Hammel
Helene Harris
Bill Hart
Mary Hermann
Jeremy Hoenack
Lee Holdridge
Lee Holdridge
Stephen A Hope
David J Hudson
Frank K. Isaac
Gary Jensen
Gary Johnson
Al Jones
Michael F Jones
Joel King
Nikita Knatz
Nikita Knatz
Steve Lavapies
Louis Lazzara
Fred M. Lerner
Betty Pecha Madden
William Manns
Sergio Marcotulli
Michael H Mcgaughy
David J Mcmillan
Greig Mcritchie
John C. Meier
Mel Metcalfe
David B Miller
Bob Minor
Michael Minor
Greg Moonyham
Deborah Moreland
Riley Morgan
Boone Naar
Donald J Newman
Lesley Lynn Nicholson
Doug O'neons
Daryn Okada
Daryn Okada
Frank Orsatti
Paul Pepperman
Paul Pepperman
Dan Peterson
Chuck Picerni Jr.
Jon Pochron
Jeryd Pojawa
Roberto A Quezada
Joe Reich
Bill Reichert
Bryan Renfro
Paul "sled" Reynolds
William C Rivers
John Romano
Philip Romano
R.a. Rondell
Jeanne Rosenberg
Anthony Santa Croce
John R Savka
James Sbardellati
Charles M Stewart
Sylvio Tabet
Bob Terhune
Allen Terry
Peter Tothpal
Buddy Van Horn
Steve Vandeman
Roy Watts
Ray West
George Wilbur
Mary Williamson
Henry Wills
Jerry Wills
Joe Woo
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Beastmaster -
High priest Maax (Rip Torn) plans to kill the unborn son of King Zed (Rod Loomis) after witches predict the child will one day grow up to destroy him. When Zed gets wind of the plot, he banishes Maax, but not before one of the witches steals the child, Dar (Marc Singer), from his mother's womb and puts him into that of a cow. The child grows up as the son of a simple villager, but has the ability of a "beastmaster," or one who can communicate with animals through telepathy. When the Jun, a group of barbarians, murder the people of his village, Dar goes on a quest for revenge. Along the way, he meets slave girl Kiri (Tanya Roberts), an eagle named Sharak, two ferrets, Kodo and Podo, and a panther named Ruh. Also in the cast were John Amos, Vanna Bonta, Josh Milrad, and Ralph Strait.
The Beastmaster was made with a budget around $10 million. How the money was raised is in dispute. According to a January 1982 article in Screen International , co-producer Sylvio Tabet said that he and Coscarelli spent two years preparing to make the film, with Tabet having financed it completely on his own with European bank loans and private investments, but Variety claimed in August of that year that the film had been financed by a "consortium of foreign investors" and presales of foreign distribution rights at the 1981 MIFED International Film and Multimedia Market in Milan and the Cannes Film Festival. Officially, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Leisure Investment Company were the production companies, with MGM/UA Entertainment Co. as distributors.
Interiors for The Beastmaster were shot in a former toy warehouse in North Hollywood, with main exteriors and landscapes done on a 3,000 acre lot in Simi Valley, belonging to the Union Oil Company, with additional filming done at Lake Piru, in the Los Padres National Forest, The the Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada, as well as various locations in Arizona. Production lasted from December 1, 1981 to mid-February 1982, with the American Humane Association on hand to supervise the treatment of the animal actors, including twenty ferrets, three grizzly bears, a wedge-tailed eagle and three tigers. Kipling, the tiger who did the majority of acting as Ruh, was dyed black to look like a panther and trained six weeks for his role.
The Beastmaster had been scheduled for a Christmas 1982 release until United Artists acquired the domestic distribution rights and wanted to move the date up to August 20, 1982, when it debuted in Los Angeles and New York. The film was not a hit, only just making back its costs with a $14 million take at the box office. However, The Beastmaster became a staple on cable television in the 1990s. Said TNT programming executive Phil Oppenheim, "It's among our most popular movies. It's in the second tier after Gone With the Wind (1939)." A sequel, Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time with Marc Singer reprising his role, was released in 1991, and Singer played Dar again in a television movie in 1996. Tabet would revisit The Beastmaster once more as a television series on Syfy from 1999 to 2002.
SOURCES:
The AFI Catalog of Feature Films
Browne, David "Why "The Beastmaster"? Entertainment Weekly 1 Sep 93
The Internet Movie Database
By Lorraine LoBianco
The Beastmaster -
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States August 20, 1982
Based on the novel "The Beast Master," written by Andre Norton and published by Harcourt, Brace in 1959.
Released in United States August 20, 1982