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Sante Fe Trail/Abilene TownRating:
Release Date: 27 February, 2001 Retail Price: $9.99 OUR Price: $9.99 You SAVE: $0.00! Cast: Complete Cast (13 total) |
Sante Fe Trail/Abilene Town Reviews
Strange Classic
Many people are no doubt thrown off by the odd politics of this film. This never actually bothered me. Today we have become so mired in political correctness outlook that we can't view a film like this objectively anymore. Sure some of the views are a bit dated. But this is a hollywood 1930s film, made around the same time as Gone With the Wind. The views in that film are also strange, but its considered a classic none the less.
The main premise of this film is to show the looming storm clouds of Civil War. The historical facts here are certainly off the mark in many places. The film enjoys giving us a popular image of West Point in the Ante-Bellum days before the war. Many famous cadet names are bandied about that we know would be come famous just a few years later. The point here is not how accurate the data is, but to show that all these men did attend the same institution and that many would become famous adversaries on the battlefied. The film does a nice job of showing this even if it does get a lot of details wrong in the process. The bit with John Brown is amusing. Again, its a difference of perspective here. Hollywood was in love with the old South back then. Today we are in love with polotical correctness which is offended by the fanatical views expressed by the character of John Brown, who is beautifully played by Raymond Massey.
Its amusing to see Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan playing off each other here. I think the best thing to do is forget their so-called historical roles in the film, and just view them as two newly commissioned officers of the period sent to police Kansas. This way you can forget the JEB Staurt /Custer comparisons! The funny thing about seeing Reagan in a film like this is to compare him with what he would later become. We have just eulogized his recent passing in this country. The fact remains if Reagan had been a better actor he might never have become our president! This film was one of the best roles he ever had in movies! He and Flynn go round and round, and its amusing to see Reagan try and hold his own. He actually does better than one would expect next to the powerhouse Flynn with all his sex appeal back then Still, the best actor in the film is Raymond Massey by far. His portrayal of the fanatic Brown may offend some, but Brown was not unlike this. In fact its easy to compare this religious zeal to that of Bin Laden and other fanatics of his ilk. For the 1850s, Brown was seen as a fanatic by many. Abolitionism was a minority view even in the North. No one was too keen to shed blood over freeing slaves, sorry PC people, but this was so!
The final battle scene at Harpers Ferry is exciting, but wildly inaccurate. Colonel Lee actually stormed the place with a company of US Marines, not dis-mounted cavalry! And Brown had only a dozen or so mis-guided follwers by that time. The whole event was quite small compared to what the movie shows us here. Again, try to view this film from the context of both when it was made and the times it is attempting to show. By doing so you can sit back and enjoy a classic adventure romp with a little history thrown in for color.
Historically inaccuarate, but very lively action film.
Some film critics who even bother to review this movie are troubled by its political and social point of view. Never mind politics and social issues, etc. Raymond Massey plays the role of John Brown with wild-eyed ferocity. The climactic battle at Harpers Ferry is visually entertaining and exciting. Save yourself the trouble of testing this movie for its historical integrity. It won't stand up under scrutiny. As a good old Hollywood action-adventure movie, it's serves its purpose. This movie suffers in comparison to Errol Flynn's best western "Dodge City," but it has enough action and entertainment to suffice. The usual group of Flynn co-stars are on hand: Olivia DeHavilland, Alan Hale, Guinn "Big Boy" Williams, etc. Ronald Reagan playing a young George Armstrong Custer provides unintentional comedy relief. The scene with the old Indian soothsayer who peers into her camp fire and sees the approaching War Between the States is appropriately spooky. The shoot-out at John Brown's Kansas headquarters, before the action shifts to Harpers Ferry, includes a peach of barn-burning. Errol Flynn, as usual, is almost as indestructible as John Wayne. Make the popcorn, pop open a cold soda, and enjoy the mayhem.
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