The Hunt for Eagle One | |
Director: | Brian Clyde |
Producer: | Roger Corman Cirio H. Santiago Amy Searles |
Music: | Mel Lewis |
Cinematography: | Andrea V. Rossotto |
Editing: | Matt Clements Brian Clyde Vikram Kale Joshua Rosenfield |
Narrator: | Theresa Randle |
Starring: | Mark Dacascos Theresa Randle Rutger Hauer Joe Suba Zach McGowan |
Distributor: | Sony Pictures |
Studio: | New Horizons Picture Corporation |
Runtime: | 88 minutes |
Language: | English Filipino Spanish |
The Hunt for Eagle One is a 2006 direct-to-video war film directed by Brian Clyde and produced by Roger Corman, starring Mark Dacascos, Theresa Randle, Ricardo Cepeda, Rutger Hauer, Joe Suba, and Zach McGowan. Set during Operation Enduring Freedom in the Philippines, the film follows a team of U.S. Marines who attempt to rescue a captured U.S. Marine Corps captain and an Armed Forces of the Philippines major, while tracking down a group of al-Qaeda terrorists intent on launching biological weapons.[1]
The sequel, , featuring many of the same production crew and cast, came out on DVD some months later.
After a successful amphibious insertion, a small group of U.S. Marines prepare for combat against local rebels on the island of Mindanao in the southern Philippines. The U.S. Marine Corps force on the island is commanded by Gen. Frank Lewis (Rutger Hauer). While making a routine fly-by, a UH-1 Huey helicopter carrying Philippine troops and Marines, including USMC Captain Amy Jennings (Theresa Randle) and Philippine Major Aguinaldo (Ricardo Cepeda), is shot down by the rebels. Jennings and Aguinaldo escape the wreckage, and try to flee from the pursuing rebels.
A rescue team is dispatched to save Jennings and Aguinaldo, but is shot down by anti-aircraft fire. The survivors, led by Lt. Daniels (Mark Dacascos), continue onward to search for Jennings and Aguinaldo.
Jennings and Aguinaldo are captured by the rebels and taken to a village. There, Jennings tries to escape, but is caught. The following morning, Aguinaldo is executed by the rebel leader. They take Jennings to their headquarters.
The rescue team approaches the village and, learning that the rebels have moved Jennings to their headquarters, begin following the rebels. The rebels try to force Jennings to tell the U.S. government (through a video camera) that the U.S. Marines must leave the island, but she refuses, and is tortured in retaliation.
After battling several rebels, the rescue team link up with Philippine troops, and battle the remaining rebels in the headquarters. They rescue Jennings, destroy an anthrax lab, and escape from the blast. The rebel leader survives the blast, but Jennings shoots him dead. The film ends with Lt. Daniels and a Filipino soldier attached to him mourning the loss of their soldiers.
Hollywood producer Roger Corman has some experience in producing films on small budgets, and launching the careers of many later well-known filmmakers and actors.[2] Corman managed to turn a profit on every single one of his films, using the small budgets to the effect and exploiting marketing techniques.[3] For The Hunt for Eagle One. Corman teamed with Philippine producer Cirio H. Santiago as his co-producer. The pair had worked together on over 20 productions,[4] including When Eagles Strike (2003), a similar war action movie filmed in the Philippines.
Much of the principal photography took place in the Philippines with Corman employing a number of local actors. The actors who played terrorists spoke in the Tagalog language or Filipino with key scenes having English subtitles.
While not reviewed by critics in mainstream media, The Hunt for Eagle One garnered some interest from internet bloggers and critics.
Nix from BeyondHollywood.com said, "For an action film on a budget, The Hunt for Eagle One
Robert Cetti, in Terrorism in American Cinema: An Analytical Filmography, 1960-2008, described The Hunt for Eagle One as mainly a war film with "parallels to the mainstream hit Black Hawk Down