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  1. Synopsis. In the autumn of 1913, a large party of guests gather at the estate of Sir Randolph Nettleby and his wife Minnie for a weekend of shooting. Over the next few days two of the guests, Lord Gilbert Hartlip and Lionel Stephens, engage in an escalating contest over who can shoot the most game.

  2. 24 de may. de 1985 · The Shooting Party: Directed by Alan Bridges. With James Mason, Edward Fox, Dorothy Tutin, John Gielgud. While Europe stands on the brink of World War I in Autumn 1913, Sir Randolph Nettleby hosts a weekend of shooting on his estate for European aristocrats.

    • (1.5K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Alan Bridges
    • 1985-05-24
  3. The Shooting Party es una película británica de 1985 dirigida por Alan Bridges y basada en la novela homónima de Isabel Colegate. La historia, ambientada en 1913, retrata la forma de vida de unos aristócratas ingleses reunidos para la caza del faisán y mostrar así como se permiten toda clase de placeres e indulgencias.

  4. In the fall of 1913, Sir Randolph Nettleby (James Mason) invites a group of friends to join him for a weekend of pheasant hunting at his estate. His guests include the callous Lord Gilbert Hartlip...

    • (6)
    • James Mason
    • Alan Bridges
    • Drama
  5. While Europe stands on the brink of a World War in Autumn 1913, Sir Randolph Nettleby hosts a weekend of shooting on his estate for European aristocrats. Beautiful, interesting, incredible cinema. See what’s playing

  6. In the summer before World War I, British nobleman James Mason invites an assorted group of acquaintances for a weekend shooting party on his huge estate. Among the participants are longtime rivals Edward Fox and Rupert Frazer, Fox's occasionally unfaithful wife Cheryl Campbell, and staunch anti-hunting advocate John Gielgud.

    • (97)
    • United Kingdom
    • Fred Tammes
    • Alan Bridges
  7. Gordon Jackson as Tom Harker. Rupert Frazer as Lionel Stephens. Joris Stuyck as Count Tibor. "The Shooting Party" begins, with suitable irony, in the days just before World War I, when the British upper class was able to look out over a world that seemed secure, prosperous and unchanging.