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Cheyenne Autumn (1964)
Released By: Warner Home Video   Rating: Not Rated   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Warner Home Video
Genre: Western
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Director: John Ford
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Carroll Baker, Dolores Del Rio, Edward G. Robinson, James Stewart, Richard Widmark, Sal Mineo
Published ID: 2900
UPC: 012569398078,
Plot: John Ford's last western film, Cheyenne Autumn was allegedly produced to compensate for the hundreds of Native Americans who had bitten the dust in Ford's earlier films (that was the director's story, anyway). Set in 1887, the film recounts the defiant migration of 300 Cheyennes from their reservation in Oklahoma territory to their original home in Wyoming. They have done this at the behest of chiefs Little Wolf (Ricardo Montalban) and Dull Knife (Gilbert Roland), peaceful souls who have been driven to desperate measures because the US government has ignored their pleas for food and shelter. Since the Cheyennes' trek is in defiance of their treaty, Captain Thomas Archer (Richard Widmark), who agrees with the Indians in principle, reluctantly leads his troops in pursuit of the tribe. While there was never any intention to shed blood, the white press finds it politically expedient to distort the Cheyennes' action into a declaration of war. Thanks to the cruelties of such chauvinistic whites as Captain Oscar Wessels (Karl Malden), the Cheyennes are forced to defend themselves--and whenever Indians take arms against whites in the 1880s, it's usually misrepresented as a massacre. Only the intervention of US secretary of the interior Carl Schurz (Edward G. Robinson) prevents the hostilities from erupting into wholesale bloodshed. Based on a novel by Mari Sandoz, Cheyenne Autumn is a cinematic elegy--not only for the beleaguered Cheyennes, but for John Ford's fifty years in pictures. It is weakest when arbitrarily throwing in a wearisome romance between Richard Widmark and pacifistic schoolmarm Carroll Baker, who out of sympathy for the Indians has joined them in their 1500-mile westward journey. When the Warner Bros. people decided that the film ran too long, they chopped out the wholly unnecessary but very funny episode involving a poker-obsessed Wyatt Earp (James Stewart). Contrary to popular belief, this episode was included in the earliest non-roadshow prints of Cheyenne Autumn; the scene was excised only when the film went into its second and third runs in 1966 (it has since been restored). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Probably a bit too long... but an apology is always a good thing.
Added 11/1/2009

Do not apologize it's a sign of weakness!... If you know your John Ford you know it is a recurrent line in SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON...
Well, CHEYENNE AUTUMN can be considered Ford's apology for the way he portrayed the plains Indians all through his filmography... a late film, a bit sour and sarcastic (as TWO RODE TOGETHER) it is mainly remembered by the anthological middle scene on the film where Jimmy Stewart shines as ever...
The cast is OK... great actors... but the script is a bit too long (that is why minus one star).
Ford is still my favorite director western or not.

ADB

Get also TWO RODE TOGETHER and SERGEANT RUTLEDGE... less known films maybe but the work of a solid director.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
LAST WESTERN PORTRAIT FROM A MASTER
Added 6/12/2009

This was the last Western film done by John Ford, who was considered by many to be the genre's greatest director. Gems like "The Iron Horse", "Stagecoach", "My Darling Clementine", "The Searchers" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" would certainly validate that consensus. Perhaps it wasn't the West of Frederick Remington or Charles Russell, but Mr. Ford's results are just as vivid. As is his custom, Mr. Ford rewards with viewer with beautiful visuals and stalwart performances from a star-studded cast. A fine tribute to the West of America ... and of John Ford. Let this one find a place in your DVD collection.
0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
No Problems
Added 3/6/2009



Had no problems at all . Very fast service. Will buy from again.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Cheeze and crackers
Added 11/30/2008

Well, there's good cheese and there's bad cheese--this was Cheeze Whiz. Sitting through it was an ordeal. The intent may have been good--i.e., John Ford's "apology" to the Indians--but other than that it was one bad Hollywood cliche after another. Richard Widmark, who can't act to save his life, plays a sort of prototype Oskar Schindler who risks his army career to go to bat for the Indians. Karl Malden plays a Prussian authoritarian sociopath, an easy villain. The Cheyenne themselves might have been humanized here if their leaders hadn't been played by stodgy, middle-aged white men with pointy noses and mall bangs. Ricardo Montalban is in mediocre form as usual, and Sal Mineo is, also as usual, an Italian-American version of Elvis. The only Indians with any dignity are the extras, who appear to be real Indians but probably not Cheyenne. And on top of everything else, this had to end as a love story. Pass the barf bag, please.
2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Profound and hopeful movie
Added 7/8/2008

The put-downs in another review prompted me to do my own. Cheyenne Autumn tells of the departure of the surviving Cheyennes from "Indian Territory" in Oklahoma (not yet a state at the time) to trek 1,500 miles to their old homeland -- the movie is beautiful visually, profound in its themes [you have to think about them yourself, this is not philosophical discourse -- but it is a MOVIE, after all] One reviewer noted as a negative the "grumpy mad elder cheif who dies passing cheifhood to the bad Indian". If "mad" here means "crazy," it would be totally off the truth, and if "mad" here means "angry" [more likely], the Chief's anger is well-grounded in the official inattention to his people's needs and the promises made -- "inattention" which had cost the lives of more than 2/3rds of his people by starvation and disease. The sub-themes of revenge and of marital brokenness add some depth to the theme of a people restored... The "Dodge City" sequence is a comic interlude, the reviewer who considers it irrelevant and distracting has his own point BUT the episode appears, per historical information, to be valid enough to make it part of this epic American history -- and its inclusion is validated from history, by the decade and a half earlier episode of another "drunken citizens volunteer army" -- the Paiute Indians under war-chief Numaga killed 70% of the Carson City force which attacked them
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Probably a bit too long... but an apology is always a good thing.
Added 11/1/2009

Do not apologize it's a sign of weakness!... If you know your John Ford you know it is a recurrent line in SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON...
Well, CHEYENNE AUTUMN can be considered Ford's apology for the way he portrayed the plains Indians all through his filmography... a late film, a bit sour and sarcastic (as TWO RODE TOGETHER) it is mainly remembered by the anthological middle scene on the film where Jimmy Stewart shines as ever...
The cast is OK... great actors... but the script is a bit too long (that is why minus one star).
Ford is still my favorite director western or not.

ADB

Get also TWO RODE TOGETHER and SERGEANT RUTLEDGE... less known films maybe but the work of a solid director.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
LAST WESTERN PORTRAIT FROM A MASTER
Added 6/12/2009

This was the last Western film done by John Ford, who was considered by many to be the genre's greatest director. Gems like "The Iron Horse", "Stagecoach", "My Darling Clementine", "The Searchers" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" would certainly validate that consensus. Perhaps it wasn't the West of Frederick Remington or Charles Russell, but Mr. Ford's results are just as vivid. As is his custom, Mr. Ford rewards with viewer with beautiful visuals and stalwart performances from a star-studded cast. A fine tribute to the West of America ... and of John Ford. Let this one find a place in your DVD collection.
0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
No Problems
Added 3/6/2009



Had no problems at all . Very fast service. Will buy from again.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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