Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn Indiana of the early 1800s, conflict once again arises between the United States and Great Britain over territory and boundaries. Each side endeavors to gain the support of the Shawnee In... Tout lireIn Indiana of the early 1800s, conflict once again arises between the United States and Great Britain over territory and boundaries. Each side endeavors to gain the support of the Shawnee Indian tribes in the area. Governor William Henry Harrison enlists the aid of Steve Ruddell,... Tout lireIn Indiana of the early 1800s, conflict once again arises between the United States and Great Britain over territory and boundaries. Each side endeavors to gain the support of the Shawnee Indian tribes in the area. Governor William Henry Harrison enlists the aid of Steve Ruddell, whose friendship with the Shawnee chief Tecumseh goes back to childhood. Tecumseh's leade... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Barker
- (as Rory Malinson)
- English Lieutenant
- (as Gilbert V. Perkins)
- Sentry
- (non crédité)
- Henchman
- (non crédité)
- Townsman
- (non crédité)
- Townsman
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
There's some manipulation of the historical facts (the story takes place as the War of 1812 is about to start), but I've seen much greater historical distortions in many, many films (like in "Gone With the Wind"...).
Overall, this was pretty enjoyable, but not a film I would bother viewing more than once. The dialog was dull. The scenery was nice. The Technicolor was fantastic.
I rated it "4", just for the chance to see Jay Silverheels in something other than "The Lone Ranger".
"This is a story of two men in a town all drawn by a strong destiny into the maelstrom that was to be the War of 1812 between the United States and England. One of these men was an American, Steven Ruddell, the other was Tecumseh, greatest of all Indian chiefs. Who had his head quarters at the town of Tippecanoe, home of the Shawnee Indians. The fuse was burning close to the powder keg of war when a flat boat carrying a shipment of salt from Vincennes, capital of the United States territory of Indiana, sailed up the Wabash river bound for Tippencanoe "
History gets fudged as the makers produce a film that looks real nice, but is a dull as dish water on an entertainment level. Silverheels turns in a good show, but the makers fail to give the character the dignity he warranted, while Skall's capturing of the scenic locale at Simi Valley, California, is of a high calibre. Everything else feels unnatural, almost as if the production team hadn't a clue how to make this little slice of history into a feature length movie. Mercifully it clocks in at a short 73 minutes, but for many, myself included, that's 73 minutes too long. 3/10
The story's supposedly set around ousting out the British from the frontier-land, as the emerging U.S claim the land for themselves. The idea here, is that which ever side wins over these Indian tribes will score, strategically. When these white dignitaries hold 'discussions' in meeting rooms, these are dry and boring and where the worst script atrocities occur, especially when there is a Shawnee Chief present to (mildly) offend.
Looking, however at its positive aspects and maybe its key audience on release - young boys wanting a cowboy and Indian film, it fares a lot better, with the aforementioned action and stirring rough and tumble. The film looks quite good, too, at least when it's outside in the big old West, rather than the stuffy studio sets. I saw it on a UK commercial TV channel.
William Skall shoots the Battle of Tippicanoe in Technicolor very nicely if all too briefly, but this wouldn't be a Sam Katzman production with the incompetent Spencer Gordon Bennett directing if there wasn't something odious about the production, and here's it's performances, with most of the performers speaking like they've never used words before.
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesThe actual battle of Tippecanoe lasted around two hours, not minutes. The battle started before dawn and ended after the Indians retreated after running low on ammunition. The town of Tippecanoe was not burnt down, the native town was destroyed. The movie only shows Militia in gray uniforms, but there were also Regulars (in blue) and Dragoons (mounted infantry) who played a major role in the battle. Finally, although hand to hand combat was shown, none of the Militiamen had a bayonet on his musket.
- ConnexionsFeatures La peine du talion (1948)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Durée
- 1h 13min(73 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1