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The Deerslayer

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
442
YOUR RATING
Lex Barker, Rita Moreno, and Forrest Tucker in The Deerslayer (1957)
AdventureWarWestern

In colonial America, wanderer Deerslayer gets involved with Tom Hutter, a bigoted trapper, and his two contrasting daughters.In colonial America, wanderer Deerslayer gets involved with Tom Hutter, a bigoted trapper, and his two contrasting daughters.In colonial America, wanderer Deerslayer gets involved with Tom Hutter, a bigoted trapper, and his two contrasting daughters.

  • Director
    • Kurt Neumann
  • Writers
    • James Fenimore Cooper
    • Carroll Young
    • Kurt Neumann
  • Stars
    • Lex Barker
    • Rita Moreno
    • Forrest Tucker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    442
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kurt Neumann
    • Writers
      • James Fenimore Cooper
      • Carroll Young
      • Kurt Neumann
    • Stars
      • Lex Barker
      • Rita Moreno
      • Forrest Tucker
    • 12User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Top cast11

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    Lex Barker
    Lex Barker
    • Deerslayer
    Rita Moreno
    Rita Moreno
    • Hetty Hutter
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Harry March
    Cathy O'Donnell
    Cathy O'Donnell
    • Judith Hutter
    Jay C. Flippen
    Jay C. Flippen
    • Old Tom Hutter
    Carlos Rivas
    Carlos Rivas
    • Chingachgook
    Joseph Vitale
    Joseph Vitale
    • Huron chief
    John Halloran
    John Halloran
    • Old Warrior
    Addison Richards
    Addison Richards
    Carol Henry
    Carol Henry
      Phil Schumacher
      Phil Schumacher
        • Director
          • Kurt Neumann
        • Writers
          • James Fenimore Cooper
          • Carroll Young
          • Kurt Neumann
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews12

        5.5442
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        Featured reviews

        10HONEYWALL1

        Acceptable in its time...46 years ago!

        The others contributing to the comments section on this 1957 film seem pre-occupied with the so-called Political Correctness and racism of today. One goes so far as to say that he can't understand how children of the 1950's could accept this as entertainment. Well, let me comment on the last thing first. This film was released in the UK in December, 1957, when I was ten and three quarters years of age. At that time, both myself and all my boyhood pals had recently gone through the Davy Crockett phase and subsequently, any movie set in Colonial America and having plenty of yipping injuns; frontiersmen and flintlock muskets and pistols was bound to be popular with us. In this respect and at that very different time, THE DEERSLAYER was bound to be popular with the juvenile audience it was aimed at. It also had beautiful, warm and sunlit scenery, spendidly photographed

        in CinemaScope and Color by De Luxe and a memorable score by Paul Sawtell and Bert Shefter.

        At the time, I thought this film was marvellous and very exciting, especially the Indian attack on the fort in the middle of the lake. Me and my pals had a new hero in The Deerslayer and incorporated him into our games of cowboys and Indians in which some of us would play the Hurons, mown down mercilessly by the musket fire of the other boys.

        This may seem very strange now to younger readers of this site who can't remember the 1950's, but this was the way it was then. Throughout our childhood, we had been indoctrinated by the cinema into believing that what would now be considered racist ideas about native Americans were correct. They were represented as "squalling polecats" and "savages" and "heathens", not as people. Just as anonymous targets to be mown down. A hindrance and a thorn in the side of white settlers pushing the frontier Westward.

        So this film is a product of its time and should not be judged by our modern standards. There had been the very isolated film like BROKEN ARROW, that gave a more accurate and sympathetic view of the American Indian, but for every BROKEN ARROW, there were a dozen films of the calibre of THE DEERSLAYER; THE GUNS OF FORT PETTICOAT and DRAGOON WELLS MASSACRE. I do not think that our ideas as children about Red Indians would have been considered racist in 1957, because we kids had never heard that word at that time. But I like to think that we've all grown up a lot in our knowledge and attitudes since then. After all, I realise now that the Indians were fighting for their land, which was being stolen from them by the whites and fighting to preserve their way of life. They had a right to fight back. Looked at today, THE DEERSLAYER may look corny and racist, but it was filmed in 1957, not 2003. For it's time, then, a rousing Boy's Own adventure that would have been popular with juveniles. Modern boys in the eight to thirteen age bracket, though, probably wouldn't like it.
        selfhelpradio

        More like a TV show than a movie

        I've always shared Mark Twain's views on James Fenimore Cooper's writing & would much rather see a decent movie version of any Natty Bumpo story than having to wade through the ponderous verse, & tuned into American Movie Classics tonight to see one of the many movie versions out there about The Deerslayer. Made in 1957, this cut-rate production starring Lex Barker (who played Tarzan a few times before this), Rita Moreno (whom I have never seen this young) & Forrest Tucker (whom I like much better on "F Troop") comes across as something only marginally as good as something you might have seen produced by "The Wonderful World Of Disney." Or maybe by Sid & Marty Krofft, to be seen as the live-action segments on "The Banana Splits."

        Deerslayer & his faithful Indian companion Chingachgook stumble onto an old trader (Tucker) who asks for their help in protecting a crazy old man & his two daughters from a Huron assault. Well-groomed & stoic throughout, Deerslayer agrees (for some reason) & meets the old man on his floating fort in the middle of the river. The crazy codger hates Indians, & he seems to pamper & flatter his oldest daughter while telling his youngest (played by Moreno) that she's feeble-minded. Deerslayer has suspicions about the whole set-up, but you don't have to be an avid mystery-novel reader to figure out the reasons behind the Huron charge. Barker, constantly posing with his gun & giving those humored looks at the women that George Reeves as Superman always did, plays an android Deerslayer, & the fight scenes are about as exciting as the cliched "Yi yi yi" the Huron holler out when attacking is threatening.

        I guess this was made for the Saturday-morning-movie crowd, but there's a part of me that can't believe that even children of the 1950s would be taken in by what now seems obvious: the ridiculously stereotyped Indians, the bad, off-the-screen violence poorly done, even the wooden performance by Barker must've been seen as more comic than heroic. Daniel Day-Lewis frantically saying, "Don't worry, I'll find you!" never looked better.
        6ma-cortes

        Colorful and luminous adventure with spectacular scenarios and decent cast

        In the wilderness of early Colonial days , mountain man Deerslayer (Lex Barker) and his Mohican blood-brother, Chingachgook (Carlos Rivas) get involved with trapper Tom Hutter (J. C. Flippen) who is living with his two contrasting daughters (Rita Moreno, Cathy O'Donnell who's in love for wanderer Forrest Tucker) on an isolated floating fort . Tom's one-man vengeance against Indians has brought the wrath of the Hurons down on him , thereby garnering the reluctant aid of wilderness hunter Deerslayer . Among adventures, violence and escapes , a batch of dirty and dark secrets emerges.. James Fenimore Cooper's Great Adventure Classic !. Last of the Great Mohicans...First of the Great Pioneers... Bravery, Loyalty and Wilderness Justice.

        This is a thrilling film set in colonial America, with plenty of action , battles , violence , a love story , and including breathtaking outdoors . This peculiar B frontier western in 1950-style containing overwhelming adventures , intrigue , fights and romance . It's a quickie with lack luster and low budget but it manages to be at least an enjoyable adventure movie because containing action, sensational outdoors and outlandish thrills situations abound . The story is neither realistic nor ambitious, but sympathetic with good scenarios, costumes and gorgeous landscapes . Excellent action sequences with bloody attacks and spectacular as well as impressive fights. Charismatic performance for all casting . There are magnificently photographed scenes featuring forests, lakes , rivers and mountains . The reason why The Deerslayer holds up so well even today is that director Kurt Neumann invests his roles with dignity and strength. The sextet of starring actors : Lex Barker , Rita Moreno , Forrest Tucker , Cathy O'Donnell , Carlos Rivas are pretty well with special mention for Jay C. Flippen as the bigoted father.

        The film displays a haunting and rich cinematography capturing flavor of colonial life by Karl Struss, Neumann's usual cameraman. The motion picture was nicely produced and directed by Kurt Neumann (The fly, Cronos , She-Devil , Tarzan and the leopard woman). German-born film director, a specialist in second features. Made the rounds of Hollywood studios, beginning with Universal , followed by RKO , Paramount and United Artists . From 1945 worked for Sol Lesser, in the dual capacity of director and co-producer, on the "Tarzan" franchise. Excelled in low-budget crime thrillers , westerns and science-fiction subjects, such as Rocket K-1 (1950) and The Fly (1958), arguably his most successful and best-known picture. This vigorous picture The Deerslayer (1957) obtained limited successful but results to be agreeable enough . It's a good stuff for young people and adventures lovers who enjoy enormously with the extraordinary dangers on the luxurious landscapes and marvelous Technicolor photography. Rating : 6/10, acceptable and passable . The flick will appeal to adventure and Western fan .
        10Roman-Nies

        racism and sexism

        For all those who critisize possible racism and sexism in this film. Well so, whatever You like, but you need to know that the people who lived there in Northern America where different than you today. They made some mistakes you today do not make, whereas you make some mistakes they did not make then. You have to accept that history went its way without you 200 years ago. It is your right to hate racism. But life in the wilderness over there was brutal and had a darwinian attitude and I am sure that you find also some reasons to hate sbd or sth. I am no friend of hate or darwin, but it is human.
        searchanddestroy-1

        Good Fenimore Cooper adaptation

        I always assoociate Kurt Neuman the director as a science fiction film maker, but no he also made something else besides KRONOS, ROCKETSHIP XM, THE FLY...He also offered us MOHAWK - close to this one - and some adventure movies such as WATUSI, some TARZAN films for RKO with Johnny Weissmuller, and westerns: KID FROM TEXAS, DESPERADOES ARE IN TOWN.... Only films noirs miss in his career, or very small ones which I have never seen. So, this one is a very agreeable adventure western flick with a Lex Barker very comfortable in this role which seemd to have been made for him. The only regret I have is to watch it in Pan and f...scan frame. Instead its genuine LBX. Painful.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Quotes

          Hetty Hutter: Then you're not sure then that the Hurons will give him up.

          Deerslayer: Well, that depends upon what they want most: Old Tom or the scalps of their dead.

          Harry March: What makes you think they want them scalps at all?

          Deerslayer: Well, all Indians are superstitious, Hurons more than most. They believe that the spirit of the scalped warrior can never rest until the scalp is reclaimed.

          Harry March: And then you can't go to the Happy Hunting Grounds without your hair on, huh?

        • Connections
          Referenced in Le massacre de Fort Niagara (1978)

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        FAQ15

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • September 10, 1957 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • Lederstrumpf - Der Wildtöter
        • Filming locations
          • Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, USA(Bass Lake)
        • Production company
          • Regal Films
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          1 hour 18 minutes
        • Color
          • Color
        • Aspect ratio
          • 2.35 : 1

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