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The Last Of The Mohicans Movie Review Essay

1314 Words6 Pages

The true horrors of the past are beautifully displayed throughout this incredible movie. The audience is able to see all the pain, despair, love, and heartache that the Natives had to endure, as well as the effect the Native peoples had on the soldiers and Europeans. Magnificently represented in a film that is titled “The Last of the Mohicans,” starring Daniel-Day Lewis, Madeleine Stowe, and Russell Means. Released in 1992, based on a novel written by James Fenimore Cooper which was published in 1826, the movie is a dramatic period piece that takes place during the French and Indian War. Although it is directed by Michael Mann, a white film director from Chicago, it presents the lives of Natives during that era very authentically. Many native peoples, tribes, and communities were underdeveloped in comparison to countries such as England and France, and this film showed that some natives desired the European way of life. In the film, there is a clear divide within the Native tribes with those who feel it was best to act based on …show more content…

True natives actually played the roles of the natives, while the Europeans were played by white people, which is exactly as it was during that time and that made for a more authentic feeling. The film’s narrative is not negatively, but rather positively affected by the fact that it was made almost 250 years after the events of the film take place. The natives are properly depicted as living a more savage lifestyle than the Europeans, fighting using guerilla warfare tactics and relying on hunting and gathering for their subsistence. Native rights were and still are very relevant in today’s society. Not many people were always aware of the native situation, especially in 1994, and making a film like the Last of The Mohicans alerted many Americans to native rights and brought the natives to national

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