Sunday, August 15, 2010
#95 - The Last of the Mohicans
BACK-STORY
“The Last of the Mohicans” was released in 1992. It was the first big budget feature from director Michael Mann. It was very loosely based on the John Fennimore Cooper novel, but actually is closer to the 1936 Randolph Scott film. The movie is set in 1757, three years into the French and Indian War. Although the action takes place in upstate New York, it was actually filmed mostly in North Carolina. The production used 1,000 Native American actors and extras. Mann had a 20 acre frontier farm, a Huron village, and a replica of a British fort built. The director’s obsessive quest for authenticity was matched by his star Daniel Day-Lewis who completely immersed himself in his role. Part of his preparation involved a “colonial boot camp” experience in the backwoods. Mann used a respected authority named Mark Baker to vet the film. Baker is an expert on frontier life, Indians, and weaponry. Mann provided him with a copy of the script and in most cases made changes suggested by Baker. The movie was a box office success and critically acclaimed. It was awarded an Oscar for Sound.
OPENING SCENE
Three men run through the woods, chasing who knows what. Hawkeye (Day-Lewis) stops, takes aim, and kills a deer, thus establishing that he is not only a frontiersman, but also a crack shot. His companions are his adopted father Chingachcook (played by the famous Indian activist Russell Means) and step-brother Uncas (Eric Schweig) of the Mohican tribe which means he is not your typical colonist. They stop at a frontier farm where they are welcomed warmly, implying that Hawkeye is living between two worlds. The opening also indicates that some Indians are “good”.
SUMMARY
The British authorities are recruiting colonial militia to reinforce Fort William Henry which is being threatened by the French and their Indian allies. The British are arrogant and insist that the colonists owe it to their king to serve. The militia get a promise that if their homes are in danger, they will be allowed to leave. Spoiler alert: they won’t.
Cora (Madeleine Stowe) and Alice Munro (Jodhi May) are being escorted to be reunited with their father Colonel Munro who is in command of Fort William Henry. They are chaperoned by a haughty British officer named Maj. Duncan Heyward (Steven Waddington). He has proposed to Cora, but she wants to remain just friends. They are led through the forest by an Indian scout named Magua (Wes Study wearing a face that tells you immediately that he is a villain). Hawkeye’s trio are heading to Kentucky when they pick up signs of a war party and on following it come upon the ambush of Duncan’s party. The scenery is awesome and the violence intense (but not graphic) as Hawkeye saves Cora from Magua and they rescue the significant characters (Duncan, Cora, and Alice) – too bad if you are just a common British soldier! The fighting realistically portrays what happened to Braddock in the Wilderness in that volley firing is not effective against an Indian ambush in the woods.
The survivors arrive at the frontier home from the opening scene to find it burned out and everyone dead. In a moment of authenticity, Hawkeye insists they leave the bodies unburied because burying them would give away that they had been there.
Next we have the standard campfire, getting to know you scene. Surprise, Cora dislikes Hawkeye. Spoiler alert: that will change. She asks him why anyone would want to live on a farm in the feral wilderness. He tells her that many backwoodsmen had been indentured servants who want to own their own land and not be beholding to anyone. A French-led war party approaches but turns away when they encounter a sacred Indian burial ground. It turns out that unlike other movies where passing through a burial ground is certain doom for whites, they can also protect you!
They arrived at the fort and it is under an 18th Century siege. Fort William Henry was reconstructed using historical documents and the effort shows. The scene accurately recreates the various elements of a siege-- the trenches, flares, fascines, even the little details like covering the touchhole of a cannon with sheepskin. They sneak into the fort at night. A great scene with Oscar winning sound effects.
Cora is reunited with her father and he is informed that Indians are raiding colonial farmsteads. He refuses to allow the militia to leave. ( A tough, but wise decision that is portrayed as an inhumane act of perfidy by the hissable British upper class twit. ) Meanwhile in French General Montcalm’s camp we learn that Magua has a grudge against Munro because of the destruction of his village, the killing of his children, and the loss of his wife. He vows to kill Munro and his daughters to wipe out their bloodline.
A courier needs to be sent to Albany for reinforcements so Duncan leads a diversion of a unit firing volleys while Hawkeye shows his mastery of the Kentucky rifle by picking off Indians trying to tomahawk the fleet-footed courier.
Hawkeye meets with Munro ( called George in the movie when actually named Edmund – why? ) He can not convince Munro to let the militia go home to defend their families. Munro threatens punishment for sedition. This accurately reflects the British army’s attitude toward colonial forces. Do as we say, no questions asked.
Cora and Hawkeye are now in love. In a nice touch their first kiss is accompanied by swirling music, but no dialogue. Some of the militia escape during the night so Hawkeye is arrested and sentenced to death. Cora defends him to her father showing she is not your typical British woman and she even sides with the colonial militia’s point of view. Munro agrees, apologizes and insists she marry the half-Indian frontiersman instead of the upper class British officer. Just kidding. The death sentence stands.
Munro and Montcalm meet to discuss surrender. After being assured no relief is coming and guaranteed safe passage to Albany, Munro agrees to abandon the fort the next day. That night Montcalm meets with Magua and assuages his anger at the terms by telling him “I can’t break the terms” (wink, wink)
On the march from the fort the foreboding is broken at first by several Indians preempting the ambush by rushing out to count coup. An accurate portrayal of a problem that is going to continue for well-planned Indian ambushes all the way through the Plains Indian Wars. When the ambush begins there is mass chaos, appropriately so. Cora shoots an Indian right between the eyes with a pistol. The trio race through the melee looking for the girls. There is lots of hacking. The atrocities are realistic for Indian warfare. Magua cuts out Munro’s heart, but Hawkeye rescues Cora and Alice and they escape in a canoe. They link up with a surly Duncan. Can you have a chase scene in a movie set in 1757? Of course! Could we throw in rapids and a waterfall? Done. They hide in a cave under the waterfall in a visually striking locale.
Magua is hot on their trail and it is obvious he will find them and their powder is wet meaning they will not be able to put up much of a fight so Hawkeye makes the tough decision to survive so he can rescue Cora. “You stay alive, no matter what occurs. I will find you”. He jumps into the waterfall. Cora, Alice, and Duncan are captured. You can guess what happens to the expendables who are with them.
The next scene is in the reconstructed Huron village. Magua is trying to convince the sachem to let him have his revenge. Hawkeye walks a gauntlet of angry Huron to approach the sachem. He argues that the sachem should not become greedy and “civilized” like the British. He wants to take Cora’s place on the stake, but Duncan mistranslates ( he speaks Huron? did they teach that at Eton? ) and gets himself staked. So the cad becomes a reformed martyr in the end. Hollywood loves redemption. Magua gets the consolation prize of Alice as his bride. Although she is the ideal wife - she barely says a word in the movie - he is upset. Hawkeye mercifully shoots Duncan from a far distance as he is being lit up.
Uncas chases after Magua to rescue Alice ( who he is ,of course, in love with ), but in a surprise to movie audiences everywhere, Magua kills him and throws his body over a cliff. In a poignant moment, the Bambi-like Alice jumps off the cliff joining him. The scene is made more powerful by the sparse dialogue. Actions do the talking. This has all been witnessed by Hawkeye and Chingachgook from afar. It’s revenge time! Chingachgook comes raging in like a charging grizzly bear as Hawkeye clears the path with his rifle. The penultimate battle is shockingly brief as the grieving father quickly dispatches one of the great villains of filmdom. Way to flout movie conventions!
THE FINAL SCENE
Chingachgook and Hawkeye lay Uncas to rest. Pop is now “the last of the Mohicans”. He predicts that “one day there will be no more frontier … , but once we were here.”
RATINGS
Action - 10
Acting - 10
Accuracy - 9
Realism - 10
Plot - 10
Overall - 10
WOULD CHICKS DIG IT?
Of course. Cora is a strong female character and something of an 18th Century feminist. She stands up to her father, finds true love, survives many perils, and looks lovely throughout! Then throw in Daniel Day-Lewis as the protagonist. What’s not to like?
ACCURACY
For a movie based on a novel, the movie is actually very accurate. Credit has to go to Mann for going beyond the call of duty in making the movie authentic right down to the moccasins. It was interesting to read Baker’s comments on the original script and see how Mann listened to him on most of his complaints. And the ones where Mann vetoed the suggestions were all sensible digressions from historical accuracy. Having an anal director may be hell on the actors and the financers, but it makes for a wonderful movie for us hard core war movie buffs.
The historical centerpiece of the movie is the siege of Fort William Henry and it is handled admirably. I know of no other movie that so accurately depicts 18th Century siege warfare. The reconstruction of the fort was well worth the time, effort, and funding. You will learn something from this movie unless you are already an expert. The best war movies take you back in time to experience what it was like from the safety of your theater seat or recliner. This also applies to the frontier farm and the Huron village.
The movie accurately portrays the interaction and customs of three groups – the frontiersmen, the Indians, and the British army. In particular, the Native Americans are not all “noble savages” or “bloodthirsty heathens”. A majority of them are anti-colonists, but that is as it should be. If you think about it, Magua has legitimate reasons for revenge. Portrayed by Mel Gibson in one of Hollywood’s many revenge pics, he would be the hero.
With that said, there are two major inaccuracies in the tale. First, Montcalm’s character is unfairly maligned by implying he condoned the ambush. Note the year the movie premiered and add the fact that he was French and you can figure no American would complain about his portrayal. Second, in reality only the rear of the retreating column was attacked. It consisted of mainly civilians. Between 70 and 180 were killed. None of them was Munro, who escaped in the forest. Obviously, the column was not attacked because one Indian wanted revenge for his family. In fact, the Indians were upset that the French lenient terms had deprived them of the anticipated spoils of the battle.
The rest of the plot is based on a novel, so there was no person named Nathaniel Poe (Hawkeye) and I doubt we will ever know who the last of the Mohican tribe was. Speaking of the source, Cooper’s book is justifiably famous, but does not hold up well as literature. Mann’s plot actually improves on the novel. That is something that cannot be said of most movies based on famous novels. All the changes Mann made are for the best. And he made a lot of changes! Many of the characters who died in the book, survive in the movie and vice versa. Some of the romantic attachments are different ( e.g. in the book, Hawkeye falls in love with Alice ). Students in American Literature class who are assigned this book - do not watch the movie instead!
CRITIQUE
This is a magnificent movie. It combines an interesting plot with great acting and a real concern for historical accuracy. Kudos to Michael Mann for getting the little details right. Let’s face it, even war movie nuts do not care if the moccasins are circa 1757. However, when a director insists on accuracy down to the ground and cares if anyone will notice, you get a better movie for purists.
Also commendatory was the tampering with the plot of the novel. I admit I get upset when a nonfiction source is changed to Hollywoodize a movie, but I do not think it is hypocritical to endorse what Mann and the screenwriters have done. Especially since most literary critics are not big fans of the novel. As long as you get the historical facts mostly right, why not make the tale batter?
The movie also looks good. The scenery is breathtaking. Parts of North Carolina really do look like the frontier of colonial America. The score is perfect. Interestingly, the music was done by two composers separately – Trevor Jones and Randy Edelman. That might have been a dysfunctional situation, but you can’t tell from the finished product.
CONCLUSION
So here we have a movie with great acting, a moving score, realistic sound, romance, action, suspense, violence, and historical accuracy. Why is it not ranked higher than #95? I cannot get into the minds of Armchair General’s panel of experts, but I can guess they may have the same problem I have with ranking it really high. Is it really a war movie? Certainly more than “Ben Hur” and it does fit my definition for a “war movie”, but since it fits better into other categories like historical epic or action romance, I cannot rank it as one of the great war movies. After all, would you ever find a copy of “Last of the Mohicans” in the war novels section of a book store? However, as a movie that could be described as a war movie, it is better than a vast majority of the movies on the list.
Up next: #94 - "A Bridge Too Far"
It's a brilliant movie and thank you for pointing out how accurate it is. Since I do consider myself to be an expert when it comes to books as I studied literature and worked for editing houses I can only confirm: the book is not that thrilling. A huge disappointment when compared to the movie anyway. Very rare indeed, more often we are disappointed in the movie not in the book.
ReplyDeleteI have never read the book because of the poor reviews. Obviously the movie improves on the book which apparently was not too difficult. "Guadalcanal Diary" is another example. The book is boring and overrated.
ReplyDeleteExcellent Review, I think that Cora's story was little bit altered in the movie because in book it had a diff sort of ending...kind of tragic.
ReplyDeleteI have never read the book, but the research I have done indicates it is not very good and the movie very much improves on the story. Sometimes Hollywood can actually do a good job!
ReplyDeleteMajor Heyward was speaking French to Sachem, not Huron.
ReplyDeleteSome tribes, knew some French because of French traders and Catholic missionaries that evangelized certain tribes in that time period.
DeleteCooper's style doesn't hold up well for modern audiences. Reading any one of his books is like wading through a vat of molasses, even they have as much action as James Bond or Rambo. That's why they actually work better when adapted to movies.
ReplyDeleteOops. Make that "even *though* they have as much action..."
ReplyDeleteI agree. Sometimes classics updated for modern audiences can be quite entertaining.
ReplyDeleteConcerning the accuracy:
ReplyDeleteIt is my understanding that in reality the British didn't suck that bad at frontier warfare (they did conquer it after all :) ). They wouldn't have fired muskets blind at an unseen target and wouldn't have persisted in firing at an enemy that was closing to melee but would have fixed bayonets and counterattacked. And a musket with fixed bayonet is a formidable melee weapon against a tomahawk. The British regulars seem to act less like real British regulars and more like the pop culture clay pigeons we learned about in elementary school.
Regular infantry could beat Indians but even so the British formed a quasi special forces detachment called the Royal Americans who served a similar function to Army Rangers and were equipped with gear maximizing frontier capability. So the British knew how to fight in the wild.
Also while I am aware of glass and stalk hunting and stand and blind hunting, I have no experience with "run it the @$!# down" hunting. :)
I did enjoy the movie. The costumes are spot on. The sets are spot on. The British regulars though seem a tad caricatured.
I agree to a point and the point is "The Battle of the Wilderness". I also think you need to factor in a beaten army that has been assured free passage and then they are suddenly assaulted by screaming savages. I could imagine that the movie was realistic in depicting that.
ReplyDeleteAs far as that hunting method, I have to admit I used to hunt rabbits that way when I was younger and slightly insane. I never was good at the first shot, but I was damned if I was going to let them run away and live to fight another day.
What are 15 inaccurate things in the movie
ReplyDeleteI can think of a couple off hand. Portman Square wasn't even around in 1757. And the boy at the cabin speaks with a British accent. Neither of his parents do. So...how'd that come about. And this is just a personal tic for me...when Alexandra is at the fire and asks why uncas is with them, she practically purrs like Eartha Kitt...but her next sentence her voice is it's normal tone. I'm sure I could think of more.
DeleteTo echo pirateship1982, there were several indian wars during colonial times, all won by the colonists, whose militia were inferior to regular troops, and watching movies where musket volleys are ineffective against indian-style fighting it's hard for an uninformed history enthusiast to understand why. I have guesses:
ReplyDelete1. Indian attacks were less effective against fortifications, limiting the damage done to outlying farms and small settlements.
2. Indian villages, farms, and other static sites are not defensible from attack by regular units, and tribes are less able to recover from destruction of resources.
But here's the thing that I actually suspect:
3. Colonial militia (and skirmishing units for the Regular army) have fighting tactics designed for irregular opponents, which when used make them reasonably effective even in open-field battles so long as good scouting protects them from outright ambush.
If I am right about #3 I would like to see how that worked. It is hard for me to understand how a group of guys with slow-loading rifles can hold off attackers using concealment and weapons with faster rates of fire, but I think that is often what happened and I would like to know why.
As you say, a situation where tired soldiers are ambushed may not bring out the best response, especially where the leadership is poor, but I agree with pirateship that I expected the British soldiers to do a bit better.
Superb film. What's amazing about this film is the attention to detail. Not only the moccasins, but also the red British uniforms. In most films that take place in the colonial period, British soldiers are depicted wearing bright red coats, but in fact the actual color was much darker, a sort of wine-garnet color. The film finally gets it right. Not sure, but maybe "Barry Lyndon did as well. The French & Indian War is one of my most favorite wars to study, & one of the most important, maybe even THE most important we have ever fought. Had the British/Americans lost it would of course have changed everything. In fact it was a VERY close run thing, with the British actually losing most of the early big battles.
ReplyDeleteGeez! You'd think Hollywood could make a good "epic" about Roger's (the original) Rangers. Lot of material there for a great film.
I like that both wonderfully gifted First Nations actors Russell Means and Wes Studi (among others) lent their authenticity to the film. Didn't really care for the romance (Day-Lewis was shot VERY well) but understand Hollywood had to get their ROI. Overall good film with deference to our ancestors who fought the good fight for their land.
ReplyDeleteIt seems as though only films set in the colonial era acknowledge the fact that American settlers almost always had help from friendly Indian tribes in their Indian wars. Perhaps this is because in these movies there are usually also forces from hostile European powers on hand and the audience will instinctively feel that both sides are evenly matched.
ReplyDeleteI see your point, but the colonial wars were the only war where that was a major factor. In the conquest of the West, some tribes provided scouts, but I can't think of a battle where Indians allied with the Army.
Delete