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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON (director: Raoul Walsh; screenwriters: Wally Klein/Aeneas MacKenzie; cinematographer: Bert Glennon; editor: William Holmes; music: Max Steiner; cast: Errol Flynn (General Custer), Olivia de Havilland (Elizabeth Bacon), Arthur Kennedy (Ned Sharp), Charley Grapewin (California Joe), Gene Lockhart (Samuel Bacon), Anthony Quinn (Crazy Horse), Sidney Greenstreet (General Scott), Stanley Ridges (Major Romulus Taipe), John Litel (General Phil Sheridan), George P. Huntley Jr. (Lieut. Butler), Regis Toomey (Fitzhugh Lee); Runtime: 140; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Hal B. Wallis; Warner Brothers; 1941) |
| "A
rousing
Western."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A
fictionalized biopic of General George Armstrong
Custer, that's filmed
by director Raoul Walsh ("High Sierra"/"The Big
Trail"/"Gentleman Jim") as a rousing Western. It's more
interested in entertaining than being historically
correct, as it mixes
fact and fiction. It has no
problem admitting its history is so much bull--even
making out Custer
was an Indian sympathizer, that he chivalrously led
his troops on a
suicide mission in 1876 at Little Big Horn to save the
troops of his
army colleague and that it was a few bad apples and
not a greedy
government Indian policy that caused the war. The
lively screenplay by Wally Klein and Aeneas MacKenzie
play to Walsh's strength as an action
director. It features
a dashing Errol
Flynn at his most
adventurous. The film opens showing the
incoming plebes
at West Point in 1857, that includes
George Armstrong
Custer (Errol Flynn) dressed flamboyantly and sporting
long curls. Bad
boy Custer says he wants to experience
the glory of war. Cadet Custer gets low
grades and commits
many infractions at the Point,
and while on a 'punishment tour' meets Elizabeth 'Libby' Bacon (Olivia de Havilland). After
graduation,
Custer talks his way into getting a commission to
fight in the
Civil War, with the help of a
general friend. At the Battle of Bull Run on 21 July
1861, Custer
disobeys orders and leads a charge into enemy lines.
Wounded in battle,
Custer receives a medal for his valor. Sent home to
recover, he hooks
up again with Libby and proposes. But her father (Gene
Lockhart) refuses
to give his
permission. Custer
then
rejoins his regiment and mistakenly is made
a brigadier general of the voluntary Michigan Brigade.
Custer, at the
Battle of Gettysburg, again attacks against orders and
the brigade
suffers many causalities even as it drives Confederate
general Jeb
Stuart back. After the war concludes, Libby marries
Custer. The film's second half sets
the stage for
Custer's last stand with the Indians. With no war, Custer is
unemployed. But one of Custer's fellow cadets, Ned Sharp (Arthur Kennedy), is now a developer in
the Dakota
Territory and offers Custer a gig
as president of his corporation. But when Custer
realizes he's just a
figurehead, he refuses to take the job. Again General Scott (Sidney
Greenstreet)
comes to rescue Custer's military career and gets him
a
post at Fort
Lincoln in the Dakota Territory. The fort is rundown
at Custer's
arrival, and Sharp has opened
a trading post on the fort that sells
rifles to the Indians and he also runs a bar that
keeps the cavalrymen
drunk and unfit for duty. Custer
closes the bar and shapes up his troops, as under his
charge the
Seventh U.S. Cavalry prepares for war in the Black
Hills with the Sioux.
Meanwhile
Sharp and his business partner father, hook up with
crooked
Washington D.C. insiders to get Custer removed from
his post command.
But with Sitting
Bull on the
warpath, Custer gets back his command and the rest is
more or less
history. REVIEWED ON 6/21/2011 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |