Cheyenne Autumn

John Ford
USA 1964
147 min
V'04

Plagued by ill health and hampered by the obtuse decisions of dull-witted studio chiefs, John Ford had reached a point in his life not unlike that of the tribe he depicts in <i>Cheyenne Autumn</i>, his final Western. A large majority of the remaining 1000 members of the Cheyenne tribe forced onto an Oklahoma reservation in the 1870s have been killed by disease and starvation while waiting a year for promised government aid. Driven by the need to survive, the last 250-odd Indians begin an arduous 1,500 mile trek to their ancestral lands in Wyoming, accompanied by Quaker schoolteacher Deborah Wright (Carroll Baker). The army dispatches Capt. Thomas Archer (Richard Widmark), Deborah's fiancé, to pursue the Cheyenne, a task for which he has little liking. En route, the hot-blooded Red Shirt (Sal Mineo) battles with army troops, and the incidents are exaggerated by the press, which calls for a vigorous response to the \"marauding savages.\" As the journey continues, the stoic Cheyenne must endure the rank stupidity and malign indifference of their Caucasian usurpers. The star-studded cast, including James Stewart, Edward G. Robinson, Karl Malden, Ricardo Montalban, Dolores Del Rio, and Arthur Kennedy, perform admirably in a film graced by William Clothier's epic photography of the awe-inspiring Monument Valley, a location immortalized by Ford's earlier films and here providing the perfect backdrop for the legendary director's delicate, rueful, and tremendously moving farewell to the West.

Is there anything more beautiful than a long shot of a man riding a horse well, or a horse racing free across a plain? Is there anything wrong with people loving such beauty, whether they go to experience it personally, or absorb it through the medium of a movie? Fewer and fewer persons today are exposed to farm, open land, animals, nature. We bring the land to them. They escape to it through us. My favorite location is Monument Valley, which lies where Utah and Arizona merge. It has rivers, mountains, plains, desert, everything the land can offer. I feel at peace there. I have been all over the world, but I consider this the most complete, beautiful and peaceful place on earth.
Im shooting some of Cheyenne Autumn there.
John Ford talking with Bill Libby, 1964

Credits
  • John Carradine - Hatfield
  • Karl Malden
  • Sal Mineo
  • Ricardo Montalban
  • Arthur Kennedy
  • Patrick Wayne
  • Elizabeth Allen
  • James Stewart
  • Edward G. Robinson
  • Richard Widmark - Dr. Stewart McIver
  • Carroll Baker - Deborah Wright
  • Dolores del Rio
  • James R. Webb
  • William H. Clothier
  • Francis E. Stahl
  • Otho Lovering
  • Alex North
  • Richard Day
  • Ann Peck
  • Frank Beetson Jr.
  • «The Last Frontier» von Howard Fast
Warner Bros., John Ford-Bernard Smith Production
35 mm
col