The Hitcher
The terror starts the moment he stops.
On a stormy night, young Jim, who transports a luxury car from Chicago to California to deliver it to its owner, feeling tired and sleepy, picks up a mysterious hitchhiker, who has appeared out of nowhere, thinking that a good conversation will help him not to fall asleep. He will have enough time to deeply regret such an unmeditated decision.
Trailers & Videos

4K UHD & Blu-ray Trailer

Robert Harmon on THE HITCHER

C Thomas Howell on THE HITCHER
![Thumbnail for video: The Hitcher (1986) Original Trailer [FHD] Thumbnail for video: The Hitcher (1986) Original Trailer [FHD]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/dTs-9jKh5_U/hqdefault.jpg)
The Hitcher (1986) Original Trailer [FHD]

Brian Trenchard-Smith on THE HITCHER

Collector's Edition Unboxing

The Hitcher (1986) - Jim meets Ryder

Teaser

My favorite Rutger Hauer scene ever - The diner in The Hitcher

2nd HITCHER TALK on 2011 12 12 at 12 28
Cast

Rutger Hauer
John Ryder

C. Thomas Howell
Jim Halsey

Jeffrey DeMunn
Captain Esteridge

Billy Green Bush
Trooper Donner

John M. Jackson
Sergeant Starr

Henry Darrow
Trooper Hancock

Jon Van Ness
Trooper Hapscomb

Jack Thibeau
Trooper Prestone

Armin Shimerman
Interrogation Sergeant

Gene Davis
Trooper Dodge

Tony Epper
Trooper Conners

Tom Spratley
Proprietor
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Reviews
JPV852
Solid enough suspense-thriller with great action and menacing performance from Rutger Hauer, a few moments in the story felt a bit clunky, mainly how Jennifer Jason Leigh's character gets involved, which I will say the 2007 remake at least improved upon. Just a highly entertaining flick. **3.5/5**
Wuchak
**_Thrilling desert road flick ruined by an implausible villain_**
This is an action-packed thriller with the milieu of the remote Southwest à la Eastwood’s “The Gauntlet” mixed with psychological horror, even slasher. So, it’s reminiscent in ways of “Duel,” “The Getaway” and "Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry," but the enigmatic antagonist’s twistedness and powers add a goofy slasher vibe.
The writer defended this on the grounds of making John Ryder (Rutger Hauer) a "mythical character,” arguing that he intended the movie to be an allegory about the protagonist's journey and the transmission of "strength" in a twisted way, not a realistic story that required a conventional explanation.
I don’t need an explanation of the killer or his motives, but even an allegorical story requires the viewer to buy what’s going on to suspend disbelief. For instance, in “Jeepers Creepers” the creature is an ancient demonic entity. Yet John Ryder here isn’t a supernatural being in light of the climax. So, how was he able to fly through windshields and fall off moving vehicles at high speeds no worse for wear? You just roll your eyes and say, “Yeah, right.” As bad as this is, there are other absurdities.
Better films of this ilk include “Kalifornia” and “Breakdown.”
C. Thomas Howell returned for a sequel in 2003, which I’ve never seen. There’s also a remake released in 2007 with Sean Bean in the title role wherein the storyline has more depth, and you feel connected to the lead characters. Best of all, Bean is more believable, not to mention the inclusion of Sophia Bush augmenting Jennifer Jason Leigh’s role is a plus.
It runs 1h 37m and was shot in early 1985 in the Mojave Desert 3-4 hours’ drive northeast of Los Angeles (Victorville, Barstow, Amboy, Calico Dry Lake Bed and so on).
GRADE: C-
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