Daily Archives: August 27, 2020

Little Big Man (1970)

Little Big Man
Directed by Arthur Penn
Written by Calder Wittingham from a novel by Thomas Berger
1970/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Old Lodge Skins: There is an endless supply of white men. There has always been a limited number of human beings.

This tragi-comic story of a man who straddled two worlds holds up well.

The 121-year-old Jack Crabb (Dustin Hoffmann) tells the story of his life to a historian who known only of Jack’s participation in The Battle of Little Big Horn.  Most of the movie is in flashback.  When he was 10-years-old, Jack Crabb’s parents were murdered by the Pawnee.  Jack and his sister are rescued by the Cheyenne tribe.  (The word Cheyenne simply means “human being” in their language.) Jack and the Indians take to each other and he becomes the adopted grandson of their leader, Old Lodge Skins (Chief Dan George).  Jack gradually becomes far more comfortable in the Cheyenne world than in that of the white man.

In his long life, Jack shuttles between the two worlds.  In turn, he is adopted by a churchman and his horny wife (Faye Dunaway); works for a snakeoil salesman (Martin Balsalm); becomes a gunslinger and meets Wild Bill Hickock (Jeff Corey), then a general store proprieter; marries a Swede who is eventually captured by Indians; becomes a muleskinner in Custer’s (Richard Mulligan) cavalry; goes back to the Cheyenne and takes on three sisters as wives; and meets up with Custer again at the Battle of Little Big Horn.

Hoffman does a pretty incredible job aging from around 15 to 121 but all my favorite scenes had Dan George in them.  The script gives everyone concerned some sharp dialogue to sling around.  I think I would have liked it better if it had been 1/2 hour shorter but it entertained me throughout.

Chief Dan George was nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar.

Zatoichi Meets Yojimbo (1970)

Zatoichi Meets Yojimbo (Zatoichi to Yojinbo)
Directed by Kihachi Okamoto
Written by Kihachi Okamoto and Tetsuo Yoshida from characters created by Kan Shimozawa
1970/Japan
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

 

Kuzuryu: You just lie around and drink. Don’t you ever take your job seriously?
Sassa the yojimbo: I get by.

Our invincible blind swordsman comes up against the invincible Toshiro Mifune.  Great fun.

Zatoichi (Shintaro Katsu), having once again killed several men who ambushed him, returns to his home town for some peace and quiet.  He gets anything but.  The town is divided up into feuding gangs. The town boss is the son of the merchant that is rumored to have stolen gold from the Shogunate.  The boss has hired Sesso the Yojimbo (Mifune) as his enforcer.  Behind his back, Yojimbo is spying for the Shogunate and is also in love with prostitute Umeno, who is the merchant’s mistress and will be until she can repay a debt. Umeno also happens to be an old friend of Zatoichi.  Zatoichi and Yojimbo dislike each other heartily but eventually achieve a grudging respect.  All this plot is accompanied by the usual amount of action.

I will watch anything with Mifune in it and you know how I feel about our blind hero.  I would say this movie has a better than average script for the series but less awesome action than the best of the bunch.  I enjoyed it.

Trailer- no subtitles