VOD (1)

Plots(1)

In Robert Aldrich's stirring film, an indominable Apache fighter, Massai (Burt Lancaster), refuses to accept the defeat of his people signaled by the surrender of his legendary chief, Geronimo (Monte Blue). Likewise, he will not swallow the pronouncement of a foe, Indian scout Al Sieber (John McIntyre), who tells Massai (with the latter securely bound in chains), "You're not a warrior, just a whipped Indian." Massai escapes a train headed for a reservation in Florida and resumes his quest to find a way of life beyond the suffocating subjugation of the white man. Sieber comes after him, as does a fully assimilated Indian, Hondo (Charles Bronson), who has been whipped into a murderous rage because Massai has stolen the heart of his woman, Nalinle (Jean Peters). (official distributor synopsis)

(more)

Reviews (2)

gudaulin 

all reviews of this user

English In the ancient times of American cinema, white actors painted with shoe polish appeared in roles of black characters. Fortunately, during the filming of Aldrich's film, this was no longer the case, and yet for the American studio, it was unimaginable to entrust the roles of Native Americans to actual Native Americans. Therefore, the beautifully blue-eyed Lancaster took on the lead role, along with his partner, a former beauty queen and the ideal prototype of a white beauty for fashion magazines. I can't help it, but no matter how much Apache tries to be progressive within its time and ideological framework, and how it tries to present the protagonist and his ethnicity in a better light, the film perfectly falls into the era of the 50s, and seeks to solve the conflict of clashing indigenous culture with the rapidly spreading Euro-American civilization through enlightening the native population and their adaptation to the skills and abilities of white men. The film comes across as naive, and schematic, and some dialogues are truly bad. Maybe it's just my problem because I associate Lancaster with a completely different type of character, but I simply didn't believe in him as an Indian. Overall impression: 40%. ()

kaylin 

all reviews of this user

English A film I expected to be a fairly ordinary western, but instead, I got an intriguing take on fighting for survival and the conditions in which it happens. Okay, it’s not overwhelmingly strong overall, but the desire to live presented here, a desire that goes beyond everything, is a testament to how much we should cherish freedom and never submit to anything else. But there's still that question mark. What, in the end, can an individual do against a group? ()

Ads

Gallery (62)