Just saw a Warner Bros. Howard Hill short on TCM, between movies. I missed the beginning, but not much. I tuned in with him and his dogs drinking from a stream, on a boar hunt. The scene cut to a local farmer with a rifle, looking for a "chicken hawk" that had been raiding his coop. The hawk caught a pigeon in the air, which looked like it was faked, and Howard "saved" the pigeon by shooting the hawk out of a tree before the farmer could shoot his gun, not faked.
They then had a contest, shooting at a rock that looked to be 30-40 yards away. The farmer shot first and broke it, and Howard shot one of the pieces. Howard's rig was described as a 100# bamboo laminated bow, with white cedar arrows.
Before the farmer left, he picked a mushroom and stuck it on the end of his rifle. Howard shot the mushroom off the end of the gun while the farmer held it.
Then there was footage of a wild boar raiding the farmer's barn, killing and eating a hen that had chicks. The farmer came and found Howard at his camp, where he had been sleeping in a tent that looked like a miniature teepee. Howard was practicing, stacking arrow after arrow in a dirt bank quite a distance away. They went after the boar, and the dogs cornered it. The farmer actually approached the boar closely enough, within a few feet, to get it to charge, and it appeared to hit him and knock him down. Howard arrived to save him and they showed the hog charging Howard. He shot it square in the center of its head at close range, dropping it on the spot. The movie ended with Howard checking out the hog, while the farmer lay on the ground injured. This must have been the shot that was replicated at the old Howard Hill World Championship that Jerry Hill used to host in Wilsonville, AL.
This is the first of these I've seen since I was a child, and it was amazing that they did the things they showed on film. The scenes were obviously staged, but the hawk and boar killing scenes were real. I couldn't believe that the "farmer" was actually put in harm's way like that. It appeared to be real, and there was no indication that the boar was restrained in any way.
The whole thing was narrated in a very light-hearted way, including the killing of the hawk, the boar killing the chicken, and the killing of the boar- even the injury of the farmer! The dogs were used for comic relief, with a couple of scenes of them moving backward, and several scenes of them reacting to the situations comically.
My, how things have changed.