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Soldier Blue (1970) Certificate 18

Soldier Blue

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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(66%)
 
Starring: Candice Bergen | Peter Strauss | Donald Pleasence
Director: Ralph Nelson
Studio: Optimum
Run time: 109 mins
Collections: 100 Wild Westerns
Genres: Action/Adventure
Languages: English
Released: March 21, 2005

A cavalry unit in Colorado is conducting two important cargoes to Fort Reunion, home of the 11th Colorado Volunteers: Cresta Marybelle Lee (Candice Bergen), the fiancée of an officer in the unit until two years ago, when she was taken by the Cheyenne, and who just escaped; and Captain Battles (Dana Elcar), the paymaster, with a strongbox containing gold. The men are tired -- almost asleep in their saddles -- and frustrated, and doubly so by the presence of Cresta, whose beauty and reputation (by virtue of living two years with savages) is driving them to distraction; all except for Honus Gant (Peter Strauss), a neophyte trooper and wide-eyed innocent. The detachment is ambushed by a Cheyenne war party and the only survivors are Cresta and Honus, who learn to tolerate each other as they struggle across the wilderness and the desert in search of help. An encounter with white trader Isaac Q. Cumber (Donald Pleasence), a profiteer who is running guns to the Indians, nearly results in their deaths, and Honus is seriously wounded. Cresta goes off in search of help and is picked up by a cavalry scout and brought to the 11th Colorado, whose commanding officer, Col. Iverson (John Anderson), is planning a punitive strike against a peaceful Cheyenne encampment over the massacre of the paymaster's party. Cresta tries to secure help for Honus but Iverson is too busy planning bloodshed, and her fiancé, Lt. McNair (Bob Carraway), is just too eager to pick up where he left off with her to listen to her warnings. She rides out on her own and returns to the village where she'd spent the previous two years, while Honus manages to survive to reach Iverson. He ends up along for the assault on the village, which takes place despite the chieftain Spotted Wolf (Jorge Rivera) flying a flag of truce and an American flag given him at a previous negotiation with the whites. The Native Americans defend themselves when fired upon with artillery and rifles, and all hell breaks lose -- virtually all of the men in the village are killed in the first assault, and then the soldiers spot the women, children, and old men, and there begins an orgy of rape, mutilation, beheadings, dismemberment, and torture before Honus' horrified eyes by joyously shrieking soldiers. Cresta kills a soldier who tries to rape her and intends to die with her Native American family but is pulled out, only to watch the slaughter continue. In the end, Honus is left to be marched back to Fort Reunion as a prisoner for trying to stop the killing, and Iverson expresses pride and satisfaction at what he's done, while Cresta and a tiny handful of survivors -- almost all old men and women -- watch in mute horror and anger.~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Rating of 3 stars out of 5
Radio Times

Very controversial on its release, this dramatisation of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 does not stint on the appalling carnage meted out to the Cheyenne by the US Cavalry. Scenes of women and children being raped and mutilated were cut by the British censor and Ralph Nelson's film was widely condemned for its extreme violence. It closely resembles Little Big Man in its tale of a white person — in this case Candice Bergen — who is kidnapped by Cheyenne tribesmen and becomes culturally enriched rather than bigoted. Like Arthur Penn's critically rated film, the vilified Soldier Blue owed a lot to the hugely influential book Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee and is an explicit allegory of the My Lai massacre in Vietnam.

Rating of 1 stars out of 5
Halliwell's Film Guide

Extremely violent 'anti-violence' Western with a particularly nauseating climax following clichés all the way. From a director with pretensions.

Highest rated reviews

13 out of 13 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
Best Ever Western

Owen McCarthy from Gloucestershire, 20th May, 2005

If you want a version of the wild west seldom told, then this is the film for you. Made well before any ofthe usual knocking the USA films were made. There is a warning on the opening title scene, be warned they mean every word of it. The end brings one to tears, thinking what fellow human being can do in the name of progress is a disturbing thought. Well acted throughout, the only real let down is the fiance, but he is in it for such a short time it does not matter. The screwy general of the cavalry, is too realistic for comfort, you can imagine it was his offspring that gave the orders in the trenches to go over the top. Great film not to be missed. I cannot praise it highly enough, I watched this when it was first released and it is still as good as ever.

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3 out of 3 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Soldier Blue

A Customer from Rushden, 4th October, 2005

Worth watching and shows how inhumane different races can be to each other and therefore are ultimately the same.

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1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2.0 stars
not what i expected

A Customer from sheffield, 20th September, 2007

i saw this film in the seventie`s,and for some reason it stuck in my mind that it was a great film,however,after watching it again,i did not think it was all that great,it was probably just nostalgia,so i can`t say i thought it was all that good

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1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
soldier blue

A Customer from ENGLAND SHROPSHIRE, 9th November, 2006

best i have seen in years. we saw this at the cinema some years ago.we watched it twice thats how good we thought it was, i would recommened it to any one.very very good we would like to see more like this that we can see twice and still enjoy it thanks

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Most recent reviews

Rated 4.0 stars
soldier blue

A Customer from Meton Mowbray, 13th February, 2010

this was a good but ruthless film

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Rated 1.0 stars
Poor Effort

GaryI from , 7th February, 2010

I remember seeing this at the cinema in the 70s in a double bill with Straw Dogs, advertised as an ultra violent cinematic package. Whereas Peckinpah's film has obtained its classic status, well deserved too, Soldier Blue is revealed as what it really is. A neat love story in a western setting spoiled by an effort to make a point through violent depictions of rape & slaughter. Indeed, those scenes are done so poorly it jars when you see them today. Soldier Blue is a poor film, with little going for it other than its notoriety, which by todays standards is scant.

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Rated 3.0 stars
Worth watching

A Customer from Hitchin, 19th March, 2009

I enjoyed the film and the story but I found the acting less than convincing. It is one of those films where I was left with the feeling that it was good but could have been better. Nonetheless, it's definitely worth watching and I'll certainly watch it again. Antal1

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Rated 3.0 stars
Great Film!!

KeekeeBabe from , 5th March, 2009

Really enjoyed this film, well made for the age of it!!

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