Film Reviews for HIST 431
An optional assignment in HIST 431 is to review a film of
merit pertaining to the Great Plains. The following
films, one way or another, meet the definition of “films of merit” for review
in this course. Others—well, ask, and maybe we can work something out. Please
use library copies if available. To check out an item from my collection,
write an e-mail to the graduate assistant, who will bring or send it to
class. (The request has to be made by e-mail, so that we have a coherent
record of who has borrowed what.)
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Genre
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Title
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Production
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Notes
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Where?
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Feature
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Powwow Highway
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Homemade Films, 1989
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Promo blurbs call this “the first Native American road movie.”
Embedded in it are all sorts of allusions and observations about
reservation conditions in the late 20th century.
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ODIN (VHS) / TI (DVD)
|
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Red
River
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Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1948
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John Wayne as the semi-deranged drover bringing a herd
up the Chisholm Trail. You have fun
critiquing the historical flubs, but this is a classic, and so don’t
discount its mythic import.
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ODIN (DVD & VHS) / TI (DVD)
|
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Friday Night
Lights
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Universal, 2004
|
High school football in West Texas—is this really the way
it is?
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ODIN (DVD) / TI (DVD)
|
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The Alamo
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Touchstone, 2004
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Billy Bob Thornton as an ambivalent Davy Crockett.
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ODIN (DVD & VHS) / TI (DVD)
|
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The Searchers
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Warner Bros., 1956
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John Ford + John Wayne, but there’s a lot more to say about
this disturbing film. It operates off the literary platform of the
captivity narrative, raising issues about race and the frontier that are
hard to handle.
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ODIN (VHS & DVD) / TI (DVD)
|
|
The Last
Picture Show
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Columbia, 1971
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An amazing cast in Peter Bogdanovich’s rendering of
Larry McMurtry’s novel. A cinematic classic, of course, and particularly
pertinent to HIST 431 as a treatment of the atrophy of small-town community
on the plains.
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ODIN (DVD) / TI (DVD)
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Shane
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Paramount, 1952
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George Stevens’s rendering of Jack Schaefer’s classic
novel. Alan Ladd exemplifies the Western myth, riding into a conflict
between ranchers and farmers, pitching in on the side of progress, and then
riding away again.
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ODIN (DVD & VHS) / TI (DVD & VHS)
|
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Picnic
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Columbia, 1959
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Stifling small town in Kansas, hot sexuality suppressed
(William Holden and Kim Novak). The film will seem hokey, but it was
sensational at the time.
|
TI (DVD)
|
|
North West
Mounted Police
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1940
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(Haven’t been able to find a print)
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???
|
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In Cold Blood
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Columbia, 1967
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Based on Truman Capote’s “nonfiction novel” treating the
Clutter family murders in Holcomb,
Kansas. Robert Blake’s best
role, as Perry Smith, the murderer.
|
ODIN (DVD & VHS) / TI (DVD)
|
|
Badlands
|
1973
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Set in South
Dakota, 1959, based on the murderous exploits of Charles Starkweather and
Caril Ann Fugate.
|
TI (DVD)
|
|
Hud
|
1963
|
Based on Larry McMurtry’s Horseman, Pass By,
the film features Paul Newman as the wayward son of a stalwart rancher, but
Patricia O’Neal steals the show.
|
ODIN (DVD)
|
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Sea of Grass
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Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1947
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Spencer Tracy stars—more description needed.
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ODIN (VHS)
|
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Thunderheart
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Tristar, 1992
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Quite a cast (Val Kilmer is the lead, an FBI agent) in a
modest, but well-made film. Loosely based on the tribal political situation
at Pine Ridge in the 1970s.
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TI (DVD)
|
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Bugles in the
Afternoon
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1952
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Custer at the Little Big Horn—more description
needed.
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ODIN (VHS)
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|
|
The
Englishman’s Boy
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CBC, 2006
|
Based on the Governor General’s Award-winning novel by
Guy Vanderhaeghe, this fine feature made for the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation by Minds Eye of Regina interpolates the events associated with
the Cypress Hills Massacre with a cinematic recreation of the same by Hollywood in the
1920s. A grim film.
|
TI (DVD)
|
|
|
Prairie Giant:
The Tommy Douglas Story
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CBC, 2005
|
Biography of Tommy Douglas, who emerged from Weyburn,
Saskatchewan, to install, as leader of the Cooperative Commonwealth
Federation, the first socialist provincial or state government in North
America and to be hailed as the father of Medicare in Canada.
|
TI (DVD)
|
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Made for TV
|
Corner Gas: Season 1
|
CVV
|
Television comedy filmed in Rouleau, Saskatchewan,
fictionalized as Dog
River. Check out the website.
|
TI (DVD)
|
|
Corner Gas: Season 2
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CTV
|
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Corner Gas: Season 3
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CTV
|
|
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Rawhide: The Complete First Season
|
|
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It’s coming
|
|
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Gunsmoke: The Complete First Season
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|
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It’s coming
|
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Documentary
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Northern
Lights
|
1973
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The Nonpartisan League in North Dakota.
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ODIN (VHS)
|
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The Plow That
Broke the Plains
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Farm Security Administration, 1936
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An artful propaganda film made for the FSA by Pare
Lorentz, presenting a powerful interpretation of the causes of the Dust
Bowl—and proposing an answer to the problem.
|
ODIN (VHS) / TI
|
|
The Germans
from Russia: Children of the Steppe, Children of the Prairie
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Prairie Public Television, 1999
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The migration of the Germans from Russia and their
distinctive culture on the North American plains.
|
NDSU (VHS) / ODIN (VHS)
|
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The Mennonites of Manitoba
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Prairie Public Broadcasting, 1998.
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Description needed.
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NDSU (VHS)
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Born Hutterite
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National Film Board of Canada, 1996
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Description needed.
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NDSU (VHS)
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Picture This:
The Times of Peter Bogdanovich in Archer
City, Texas
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Mino-Eye American, 1991
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Documentary about the making of The Last Picture Show in
Archer City, Texas. Plenty of inside information on relationships among
those who made the film, also reactions of local citizens.
|
(DVD)
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Guidelines for Reviews
1.
Choose a film of merit, such as one of those listed
in the tables above. If reviewing television shows, treat content equivalent
to a feature-length film. (For instance, three half-hour episodes of a TV
series.)
2.
Do some background research on the film, checking
online reviews and whatever else is convenient, to prepare you to view the
film thoughtfully.
3.
Jot a few notes as you view. Brief quotes, stunning
images, key points.
4.
Write the review soon after from your notes and
recollections, to a length of 300 words.
5.
Summarize the content, but do more than just
summarize. You should point out particular features of interest and give an
evaluation of the film.
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Rubric for
Evaluation of Film Reviews
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Summary
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A good summary captures background and plot of the film.
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5
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Critical
Evaluation
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A critical review points out strengths and weaknesses of
the film and, most important, its value to us as students of the Great
Plains.
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3
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Appropriate
Length
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Target length: 250-300 words
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1
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Matters of
Style
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Composition, grammar, and punctuation are important to
communication.
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1
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Points Possible
for Review
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10
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