Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Soldier Blue

 
Movies:

Soldier Blue

  • Director: Ralph Nelson
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Revisionist Western
  • Themes: White People Among Indians
  • Main Cast: Candice Bergen, Peter Strauss, Donald Pleasence, John Anderson, Jorge Rivero
  • Release Year: 1970
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 109 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

A cavalry unit in Colorado is conducting two important cargoes to Fort Reunion, home of the 11th Colorado Volunteers: Cresta Marybelle Lee (Candice Bergen), the fiancée of an officer in the unit until two years ago, when she was taken by the Cheyenne, and who just escaped; and Captain Battles (Dana Elcar), the paymaster, with a strongbox containing gold. The men are tired -- almost asleep in their saddles -- and frustrated, and doubly so by the presence of Cresta, whose beauty and reputation (by virtue of living two years with "savages") is driving them to distraction; all except for Honus Gant (Peter Strauss), a neophyte trooper and wide-eyed innocent. The detachment is ambushed by a Cheyenne war party and the only survivors are Cresta and Honus, who learn to tolerate each other as they struggle across the wilderness and the desert in search of help. An encounter with white trader Isaac Q. Cumber (Donald Pleasence), a profiteer who is running guns to the Indians, nearly results in their deaths, and Honus is seriously wounded.

Cresta goes off in search of help and is picked up by a cavalry scout and brought to the 11th Colorado, whose commanding officer, Col. Iverson (John Anderson), is planning a punitive strike against a peaceful Cheyenne encampment over the massacre of the paymaster's party. Cresta tries to secure help for Honus but Iverson is too busy planning bloodshed, and her fiancé, Lt. McNair (Bob Carraway), is just too eager to pick up where he left off with her to listen to her warnings. She rides out on her own and returns to the village where she'd spent the previous two years, while Honus manages to survive to reach Iverson. He ends up along for the assault on the village, which takes place despite the chieftain Spotted Wolf (Jorge Rivera) flying a flag of truce and an American flag given him at a previous negotiation with the whites. The Native Americans defend themselves when fired upon with artillery and rifles, and all hell breaks lose -- virtually all of the men in the village are killed in the first assault, and then the soldiers spot the women, children, and old men, and there begins an orgy of rape, mutilation, beheadings, dismemberment, and torture before Honus' horrified eyes by joyously shrieking soldiers. Cresta kills a soldier who tries to rape her and intends to die with her Native American family but is pulled out, only to watch the slaughter continue. In the end, Honus is left to be marched back to Fort Reunion as a prisoner for trying to stop the killing, and Iverson expresses pride and satisfaction at what he's done, while Cresta and a tiny handful of survivors -- almost all old men and women -- watch in mute horror and anger. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

Dana Elcar - Capt. Battles; James Hampton - Pvt. Menzies; Mort Mills - Sgt. O'Hearn; Bob Carraway - Lt. John McNair; Martin West - Lt. Spingarn; Jorge Russek - Running Fox; Marco Antonio Arzate - Kiowa Brave; Ron Fletcher - Lt. Mitchell; Barbara Turner - Mrs. Long; Aurora Clavel - Indian Woman; Ralph Nelson - Indian Agent

Credit

Frank Arrigo - Art Director, William S. Gilmore - Associate Producer, Edward Little Sky - Consultant/advisor, Ted Parvin - Costume Designer, Terry Morse, Jr. - First Assistant Director, Ralph Nelson - Director, Alex Beaton - Editor, Joseph E. Levine - Executive Producer, Buffy Sainte-Marie - Composer (Music Score), Roy Budd - Composer (Music Score), Del Armstrong - Makeup, Arthur Ornitz - Cinematographer, Robert B. Hauser - Cinematographer, Gabriel Katzka - Producer, Harold Loeb - Producer, Buffy Sainte-Marie - Singer, Carlos Grandjean - Set Designer, Herman Townsley - Special Effects, Barry Thomas - Sound/Sound Designer, Edward Little Sky - Technical Advisor, John Gay - Screenwriter, Theodore V. Olsen - Book Author

Similar Movies

Little Big Man; Geronimo: An American Legend; Ulzana's Raid
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Soldier Blue
Top
Soldier Blue
Directed by Ralph Nelson
Produced by Gabriel Katzka
Harold Loeb
Written by Theodore V. Olsen (novel Arrow in the Sun)
John Gay (screenplay)
Starring Candice Bergen
Peter Strauss
Donald Pleasence
Music by Roy Budd
Cinematography Robert B. Hauser
Distributed by AVCO Embassy Pictures
Release date(s) August 12, 1970 (New York City)
Running time 112 min
Language English

Soldier Blue is a 1970 American Revisionist Western movie directed by Ralph Nelson and inspired by events surrounding the 1864 Sand Creek massacre in the Colorado Territory.

The screenplay was written by John Gay based on the novel Arrow in the Sun by Theodore V. Olsen. It starred Candice Bergen, Peter Strauss and Donald Pleasence. The title song was performed by Buffy Sainte-Marie.

Contents

Plot

The movie provided the first motion picture account of one of the most infamous incidents in the history of the American frontier, in which Colorado state militia troops under Colonel John M. Chivington massacred a defenseless village of Cheyenne and Arapaho on the Colorado eastern plains.

The account of the massacre is included as part of a longer fictionalized story about the escape of two white survivors from an earlier massacre of U.S. Cavalry troops by Cheyenne, and names of the actual historical characters were changed.

Controversy

Lobbycard displayed in theaters

Released during the Vietnam War shortly after public disclosure of the My Lai massacre, it was controversial at the time not only for its subject matter, but also for its graphic depictions of violence. Nelson, who also appeared in the movie in a minor role, pushed the depiction of the violence to explicit levels, showing nudity during rape scenes, as well as "realistic" close-up shots of bullets ripping into flesh.

Credits

Avco Embassy Pictures, 1970

Cast

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Soldier Blue" Read more

 

Mentioned in