The Sporting Club

The Sporting Club

1971107 min
3.4/10
Comedy

Plot Summary

The wealthy members of an exclusive backwoods retreat face an existential threat from both a disgruntled former manager as well as a subversive, anarchistic current member.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

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👥Cast (17)

Robert Fields

Robert Fields

Vernur Stanton

Nicolas Coster

Nicolas Coster

James Quinn

Margaret Blye

Margaret Blye

Janey

Jack Warden

Jack Warden

Earl Olive

Richard Dysart

Richard Dysart

Spengler

James Noble

James Noble

Canon Pritchard

Ralph Waite

Ralph Waite

Olson

Jo Ann Harris

Jo Ann Harris

Lu

Linda Blair

Linda Blair

Barby

Anne Ramsey

Anne Ramsey

Scott's Wife

Helen Craig

Helen Craig

Mrs. Olds

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Lois Markle

Sheilah

🎬Crew

Director

Larry Peerce

Writers

Lorenzo Semple Jr.

Producers

Lee Rich

🖼️Gallery (7 images)

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🏷️Keywords

orgytime capsulewealthydestructionbackwoodsclass warfare

💬Reviews (1)

A

adorablepanic

4/4/2020

THE SPORTING CLUB (1971) - Businessman James Quinn (Nicolas Coster) sets out for a peaceful getaway of hunting, fishing, and drinking at the Centennial Club, a backwoods retreat whose wealthy members all value insularity and tradition. All, that is, except for Vernur Stanton (Robert Fields), a simmering provocateur and anarchist whose favorite pastime is engaging in Alexander Hamilton/Aaron Burr-style gun duels. When Earl Olive (Jack Warden), the Club's new manager, is injured in one of these wax-bullet showdowns, the perpetually stoned Olive - with assistance from his rowdy biker buddies - declares literal class warfare on the Club and its members. Since its satiric concerns revolve around issues which are so prevalent in American politics today - namely hyper-partisanship and the privileged versus the proletariat - you would think that this would resonate more powerfully today than when initially released by a clueless AVCO Embassy (who actually promoted this in some markets as a MOST DANGEROUS GAME (1932)-style human-hunting tale). Unfortunately, the story starts to gradually lose focus; the approach becomes heavy-handed and obvious; and interest starts to wane before the big orgy finale. (Yes, you read that right.) With an interesting, folksy score by Michael Small; a source novel by Thomas McGuane; and a cast full of fine character players who would become familiar faces on television over the next decade, this is one instance where the whole is quite a bit less than the sum of its parts.

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