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The Hunt 2020 -

Then-President Donald Trump tweeted without seeing the film: "Liberal Hollywood is the most racist and angry group of people anywhere. The ‘Hunt’ is made to inflame and cause chaos. They are the true Racists and Enemies of the People!"

The film’s victims are not angels. They are shown screaming racist slurs, falling for obvious conspiracy theories, and generally behaving like carnival caricatures of red-state America. One of the first victims is a "Fox News type" who tries to negotiate with the hunters using conservative talking points, which fails hilariously. The Hunt 2020

★★★★☆ (4/5) Watch on: Peacock, Amazon Prime, Apple TV (as of 2025) Keywords used naturally: The Hunt 2020, The Hunt movie review, The Hunt controversy, Betty Gilpin, The Hunt satire. Then-President Donald Trump tweeted without seeing the film:

By the time Crystal confronts Athena in the film’s finale—inside a lavish mansion decorated with fine art—Athena admits the entire hunt started because of a viral misunderstanding. A private group chat joke was misconstrued, and people died. The cause of all the bloodshed? A texting error . If the plot is the engine, Betty Gilpin is the nitro fuel. As Crystal, Gilpin delivers one of the most ferocious, physical, and witty performances of the century. With her flannel shirt, deadpan stare, and the ability to snap a neck with her thighs, she is the action hero we didn’t know we needed. They are shown screaming racist slurs, falling for

Her slow-motion realization that the "glass menagerie" of elites are actually fragile is the film’s thesis. In one iconic scene, she examines the pristine home of her enemies, looks at a $30,000 abstract painting, and deadpans: "This is a dumb picture of a horse." It is a gut-laugh that perfectly encapsulates the class war at the film’s core. Make no mistake: The Hunt 2020 is a brutal R-rated horror-action hybrid. The violence is graphic and inventive. We see impalements, explosions, throat-slittings, and a bathroom fight sequence that rivals Mission: Impossible for sheer tension.

The film’s message is bleak, but it ends on a note of dark hope. After killing Athena, Crystal sits alone on a private jet, sipping champagne. She has won. But she has nowhere to go. She cannot go back to the "deplorables" because they are dead. She cannot join the "elites" because she hates them. She is utterly, terrifyingly alone.