Movie Reviews for Apache

Apache

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Movie Reviews of Apache

Movie Review: Hollywood and History Collide
Summary: 5 Stars

Great movie that shows how the Native Americans were treated and is based somewhat on history itself. There was an Indian named Massai, and a Mr. Wettle, along with Seiber. It is not a history movie, but more of a movie based on the degredation of the Native Americans and one Indians war with them and himself. The ending is one of compromise, but in reality, this was never to be for most of the Apaches.
Burt Lancaster is at his ever popular, ripped body, and makes you believe that he could do all that the true Native American Massai did do.
For some reason this movie has just struck me as one I like to watch when I get tired of everyone else complaining that they have it so hard in life today. Especially some minority groups who did not have it so, or still are, as the Native American.

Movie Review: Real Apache with Feedback
Summary: 4 Stars

I am a biomedical engineer and work with medical informatics. I was born and raised on the Apache Reservation in Arizona. Apache had been my 1st language; however, Catholic Nuns taught me English but also encouraged me to retain my original language. I have seen the movie. In my family, I have relatives who were scouts for the US Calvary (Chief Alchesay) and others who were renegades. This movie does have have some level of of historical realism. It shows the excessive use of Apache Scouts and the fact that not all Chiricuahua Apaches surrendered. There was actually a small group that never did, and their story parallels those of the Seminoles who hid out in the Everglades. I am related to Massai, who escaped from St. Louis. I am also related to Chief Alchesay, the head scout whose warriors captured Geronimo. He was constantly on the run from Apache scouts closely on his trail in the most remote and inaccessible canyons of the southwest. It had been the strategy of General Crook and readopted by General Miles in the closing end of his campaign.

Al Sieber admitted that he failed in finding the Apache Kid and Massai, the renegades who were still at large at the end of the 19th century. Sieber was also very racist and referred to Apaches as "Red N-----s." So much for his being politically correct. I am related to Massai on my mother's side and the Apache Kid on my father's side. Massai was dying of tuberculosis and reportedly killed in the early 1900s, and his widow and children returned to Mescalero. The Apache Kid was last seen by his relatives in San Carlos around 1935. As for the scouts, Alchesay's relatives were WWII veterans. One of them died during the allied invasion of Germany while attacking Nazi gunner pits. Another was an Apache US Marine at Iwo Jima in 1945 (Semper Fidelis - USMC).

In regards to negative feedback from others, there are parts of the movie that are historically or culturally incorrect. In the first place, the entire movie is made with white actors who only speak English. Secondly, the scene with Massai tying up his wife is incorrect. In addition, there was a slave trade imposed upon Apaches by Mexico. The Mexican government also offered money for Apache scalps.

The rugged terrain and mountain running are most accurate. Apaches used to run 70 miles per day for days at a time. That is why the Mexican government used Tarahumarah scouts (who in more recent times have won the Leadville 100 mile run in 1993 and 1994 in Colorado). My favorite scene is when Massai comes up and sees the familiar Apache mountain of his homeland after running and walking hundreds of miles.

Movie Review: Good Story but Needs More Context
Summary: 4 Stars

I certainly appreciate that Apache was trying to tell a Native American story from the point of view of the Native Americans. The Apache had happy lives before the government came along and tried to squish them onto reservations. Masai, a member of the Apache tribe, is rightfully indignant when they unceremoniously toss him into a boxcar and ship him off to Florida with Geronimo.

True to the famed Apache long distance running talent, Masai escapes and manages the long, arduous trek back to his homeland. He even has a right to be cynical about his native american friends, when he is sometimes helped and sometime hindered by them. It gets to the point that he wages a one man feud against everyone around him.

That all being said, it was hard for me to setle into a mindset where I could really relate to Masai *being* a Native American. He's played by Burt Lancaster. He always looked like Burt Lancaster with red paint on him. His sweetheart in the film is Jean Peters, who looks like a white woman with red paint on her. Masai is really foul to her throughout the movie. You would think, if he really wanted to perpetuate the Apache way, that he'd want to have a female around to do this with. Instead, he actively torments the only ally he has in his fight.

When he finally does weaken enough to allow her to stay with him, the movie becomes unbelievable. The ending sequence does not make a lot of sense.

Most of the movie focusses on the towns of the old west. You get to see very little of the culture that Masai was trying to preserve. You get much more of what the natives had been assimilated into. If we are going to see hours of Masai fighting for what he believes in, I would have loved to have seen that ground laying time, to really appreciate what the Apache culture was all about. Still, I suppose for the 50s this was a step in the right direction.

Movie Review: An exciting Western with colorful action and a surprising ending...
Summary: 4 Stars

It was only in his third film, "Apache," that Aldrich's assured grasp of genre and liberal sensibilities came to the fore in a sympathetic but never maudlin portrait of an Indian alienated from both white America and his own kind...

Based upon the Novel "Bronco Apache" by Paul I. Wellman, the film relates the story of the last Apache warrior Massai following Geronimo's surrender...

Declined to live on Government reservations, a real-brave Massai became a legend for waging a one-man war against the encroaching U.S. Army in the 1880s...

Lancaster stars as the menacing, stormy, inflamed warrior whose spirit is as high as the white snowy peak of his mountain... Massai came back from far away weary from a journey that no warrior had ever made before... He seems like a dying wolf biting at its own wounds... For him there is no place in his life for love... Love is for men who can walk without looking behind... For men who can live summer and winter in the same place... Every man, every Indian is his enemy...

Jean Peters looked radiant as the blue-eyes Nalinle who really knows there had never been a chief like Massai...

John McIntire combed the whole country searching for Massai... For him it takes two to call off a war... Massai must be in those mountains somewhere...

For Bronson, "Apache" marked the first of his numerous excursions into Indian territory...

Aldrich tried to offer an inspiring message, and his film was exciting filled with colorful action scenes, and a surprising ending...


Movie Review: Thoughtful Lancaster Western
Summary: 4 Stars

Apache finds Burt Lancaster not only in his element, as he was a fantastic Western (and a great all-around) movie actor, but finding space to create great sympathy and pathos in this film, one of the earlier films to show Native Americans in a more humane light.

Lancaster plays Massai, who refuses to surrender with Geronimo, and escapes to plan a one-man revolution against the Army and settlers. Along the way, he finds love with Jean Peters and gains the respect of chief Army scout Al Sieber, played by John McIntire.

Lancaster infuses Massai with great dignity and honor, and even though we already know that his cause is bound to fail, we celebrate his triumphs and bemoan his defeats. His character has the kind of nobility that may seem Hollywood inspired, but at the end of the day, he's a man who wants to live as he chooses.

Apache is an excellent film, and a wonderful showcase for Burt Lancaster.
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