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Cheyenne Autumn
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Synopsis
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

Cast

Elizabeth Allen Guinevere Plantagenet
Carroll Baker Deborah Wright
John Carradine Maj. Jeff Blair
Ken Curtis Joe
Carmen D'Antonio Pawnee woman
Dolores Del Rio Spanish Woman
Victor Jory Tall Tree
Karl Malden Capt. Oscar Wessels
Mike Mazurki 1st Sgt. Stanislaus Wichowsky
Sean McClory Dr. O'Carberry
Sal Mineo Red Shirt
Ricardo Montalban Little Wolf
George O'Brien Maj. Braden
Judson Pratt Mayor Dog Kelly
Edward G. Robinson Carl Schurz
Gilbert Roland Dull Knife
James Stewart Wyatt Earp
Patrick Wayne Second Lieutenant Scott
Richard Widmark Capt. Thomas Archer
Arthur Kennedy Doc Holliday

Production Crew

Richard Day Art Director
Maurice Sandoz Book Author
Claude Renoir Cinematographer
William H. Clothier Cinematographer
Alex North Composer (Music Score)
Ann Peck Costume Designer
C. Frank Beetson, Jr. Costume Designer
John Ford Director
David Hawkins Editor
Mario Serandrei Editor
Otho Lovering Editor
Norman Pringle Makeup
Alex North Musical Direction/Supervision
Bernard Smith Producer
John Ford Producer
Ginette Doynel Screenwriter
Giulio Macchi Screenwriter
Jack Kirkland Screenwriter
James R. Webb Screenwriter
Renzo Avanzo Screenwriter
Darrell Silvera Set Designer
Ralph Webb Special Effects
Rudy Robbins Stunts
Year: 1964
Runtime: 160
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature

Genre
Western

Produced by
Warner Brothers

Release
by Warner Brothers