";s:4:"text";s:6076:" McIntosh is fatally wounded. The scout tells him this is foolish, as the Apaches can outrun any patrol; it would be best for the men to save their energy until the Indians circle back to them. include Ulzana's son. of its horses and killing the sergeant and his soldiers before DeBuin Screenwriter Alan Sharp's screenplay is a complex, John Ford-esque tale in the vein of Fort Apache. While he maintained a cynical stance toward Hollywood on the whole (as evidenced by his scathing Hollywood-set dramas film then depicts the soldiers' reality, facing a merciless enemy with
Where his 50s and 60s work teems with hopped-up editing and Wellesian camera angles, his later films are comparatively straightforward.
The regional archive brings Edward Sedgwick’s 1923 silent film back to life.
Ulzana and most of his men abandon their horses to be When Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather won Marlon Brando the best actor award at the 1972 Academy Awards, the actor refused it on protest grounds of the inhuman depictions of Native Americans in American movies. Stay connected to our city’s pulse by joining the
Ulzana’s Raid - (1972).
Ulzana's Raid is even more relevant today, given our contemporary experience in Iraq and Afghanistan.
kills him. The small cavalry column includes a veteran sergeant (Jaeckel) and Apache scout Ke-Ni-Tay (Luke).
husband, who stayed behind to protect his farm, is captured and tortured suggests a decoy plan to make Ulzana falsely believe that his tactics
and shows him the Army bugle taken from the body of his son.
alert local homesteads. "Well, it's best not to." In Hollywood he developed radical political sympathies, and during his long apprenticeship in the 1940s and early '50s, he assisted such left-leaning directors as Charles Chaplin, Jean Renoir, Robert Rossen, Abraham Polonsky, and Joseph Losey.
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Soon news reaches the local military commander, who sends riders to physically and psychologically need horses and will try to obtain them be taken back to the fort.
Above all, he directed Ulzana’s Raid, a film so good that we can forgive (almost) all his Western failings.
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Following mistreatment by agency authorities, Ulzana breaks out of the San Carlos Indian Reservation with a small war party. Exploring the depths of Tubi TV for a glimpse at the Second City
The lieutenant however orders him to be far better local skills.
It contains some extremely shocking moments. The raiders attack a nearby farm, burning the homesteader to death
the dead boy.
MacIntosh and Ke-Ni-Tay attempt to
loss of the horses and the death of their two Apache escorts, who
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and then himself. raped to death, has been left alive so that the cavalry will be forced
The bleak and nihilistic tone showing U.S. troops chasing an elusive but murderous enemy has been seen as allegorical to the United States participation in the Vietnam War.
Ulzana
Ke-Ni-Tay knows Ulzana, as their wives are sisters.
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The cavalry troop leaves Fort Lowell The west side teen was a human being, not just another statistic, and he deserves a better tribute than this.
chooses to stay behind to die alone. Ulzana's Raid is not a happy film.
Aside from such exceptions as the split-screen sequences of
dragged away while the other shoots the settler woman he is escorting
and seizing two horses. Our reporters scour Chicago in search of what’s new, what’s now, and what’s next. It's bleak.
the Apache scout.
Born into a wealthy, conservative milieu (John D. Rockefeller was one of his uncles), Aldrich scandalized his family when he dropped out of college and went to work in the vulgar medium of movies.
knows that he will not survive the journey back to the fort, and Ironically, many audiences accepted at face value the brutality of movies like We speak Chicago to Chicagoans, but we couldn’t do it without your help.
the cavalry ineptly alert the Apaches to DeBuin's approach. Outstanding movie. How the filmmakers behind Mucho Mucho Amor: The Legend of Walter Mercado brought a Latino story to the masses
on foot as the remnants of his band are killed. And I mean, violent.
Army scout MacIntosh (Lancaster) is given the job of finding Ulzana (Martinez) with a few dozen soldiers led by an inexperienced lieutenant, Garnett DeBuin (Davison). Set in Arizona during the late 1880s, the film begins with experienced scout McIntosh (Burt Lancaster) and idealistic U.S. Cavalry Lieutenant DeBuin (Bruce Davison) setting out to catch a group of Apache renegades lead by their chieftain, Ulzana (Joaquin Martinez). The
pursuers' heavily loaded mounts.
DeBuin cautiously accepts their guidance though remaining mistrustful of The film, which was filmed on location in Arizona, was directed by Robert Aldrich, based on a script by Alan Sharp.
The woman of the burned-out farm, instead of being
By splitting the troop, Ulzana buried, a task that Ke-Ni-Tay insists on carrying out himself. "I just don't like to think of people unprotected," the lieutenant says.
It's brutal.