The Last of the Mohicans
The Last of the Mohicans
R | 25 September 1992 (USA)
The Last of the Mohicans Trailers

In war-torn colonial America, in the midst of a bloody battle between British, the French and Native American allies, the aristocratic daughter of a British Colonel and her party are captured by a group of Huron warriors. Fortunately, a group of three Mohican trappers comes to their rescue.

Reviews
Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
2freensel I saw this movie before reading any reviews, and I thought it was very funny. I was very surprised to see the overwhelmingly negative reviews this film received from critics.
Taraparain Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
Kien Navarro Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
gunwell I do not write reviews often, but The Last of Mohicans compels me to write a review for a film that I think is vastly underrated and one of the greatest films of all time. I consistently watch this movie once a year and each time I watch it I enjoy it as much as the first.Now for the reasons:CinematographyThe locations, costumes, feel of the time period, and how each scene is shot with care never ages this movie. Many movies do not age well, but 26 years after the fact and Mohicans has aged better than many films made in the last 10 years.ActingDaniel Day Lewis as Hawkeye is in top form. He owns Hawkeye in this movie and plays him not only as a strong warrior, but a compassionate and individual who puts a lot of thought in to every action.Madeleine Stowe as Cora gives her best performance in Mohicans. She plays the older, wiser, but still vulnerable and somewhat naive older sister exceptionally well. Stowe and Day-Lewis are an extremely convincing romantic couple.Jodhi May as Alice is in my opinion is the standout actress in this movie. Her portrayal as a young siste,r who is not only extremely naive but incapable of comprehending and handling what goes on outside her wealthy daily lifestyle, is truly mesmerizing. Her haunting scene on the mountainside promenade is unforgettable.Eric Schweig as Uncas is vastly underrated. Eric very humbly once said in an interview "people come up to me and said I did such a great job acting Uncas, but I always tell them that I didn't do anything except run and say a few words", which is partially true, but he didn't have to. His facial and emotional acting for the character conveyed everything about Uncas. His love for Alice. Likewise his scene on the mountainside promenade in an effort to prove his love for and save Alice is one of the saddest, brutal, and unforgettable fight scenes in the movie.Finally Wes Studi makes the perfect villain as Magua. He is brutal in his unrelenting quest for vengeance against the British, namely Colonel Monroe and his daughters. You feel some sympathy for his situation and what happened to him with this loss of his wife, but on the other hand you will hate him for the way he carries out his vengeance. By the end of the movie you are ready for him to be brutally destroyed by Chingachgook.StoryI've tried many times to read James Fenimore Cooper's novel and watch other movies which followed the book's story. I'll be blunt here and say the book and the previous movies were very boring. I could never finish any of them. Mohicans has action, romance, drama, and tragedy. It makes for a much better movie than any movie that is follows the book.RomanceI am not a big fan of romance, but Mohicans is my kind of romance. Two unlikely, but strong female and male characters start off at odds but eventually come to respect and finally love each other. When they are both in the infirmary and Hawkeye is looking up and down at Cora, which would be offensive to nearly anyone in her position due to her social standing and the time, Cora asks "what are you looking at sir?" to which Hawkeye replies "well I'm looking at you miss". Cora looks down first in embarrassment, but then looks back up with strength and a smile. It's one of the best romantic scenes in the movie. Shortly thereafter with "The Gael" playing on a violin in the background Hawkeye takes Cora's hand and they head out of sight in a scene that shows passion but still leaves something to the imagination. Not something that is done often in modern times.ActionThe fight scenes are very well executed. Day-Lewis who is somewhat stiff in his athletic ability has done enough training to make Hawkeye a convincing warrior. The march of the British army with Major Hayward leading the escort of Cora and Alice to their father is thrilling once Magua starts the attack. There is tension in every scene as Hawkeye, Uncas, and Chingachgook lead Cora, Alice, and Major Heyward back to the British Fort. The Massacre is so well executed and you feel the fear of every survivor of the British fort being lead to their death. Finally, the mountainside promenade battles will have you cheering for the Last of the Mohicans to stop Magua and save Alice.MusicMohicans simply would not be the same movie without the soaring, epic, and romantic soundtrack composed by Trevor Jones and Randy Edelman. The main title track is an unforgettable and rousing piece of music that has been used numerous times by people across the world, from MMA fighters to rappers and even Nike commercials.Trevor Jones is responsible for the rousing main title, the romantic pieces "The Kiss" and "Promenade" derived from a scottish folk piece "The Gael".Randy Edelman provides the softer pieces that help connect the emotion and story.26 years later and the soundtrack is still as stirring as it was the first time I saw Mohicans.DirectingMichael Mann as always is an amazing director. These words from Eric Scheig in an interview tell you everything you need to know about Michael Mann from the eyes of one of his actors:"MP: Okay...... So what was it like to work with Michael Mann?ES: He was intense. He's a nice enough guy. He's pretty intense. He's one of those guys..... He's all business. He's a hard worker. He expects the same from his cast and his crew.MP: Compared to other directors you've worked with since Michael Mann, how does he fit in to the over all mold of the other directors? How is he different from them?ES: He's more meticulous, he's a perfectionist ... to the power of 10. And you know, most of them are...... but where most of them will do 3 or 4 takes of something, whether it's a close up or an establishing shot ... he'll take 12 laughs .... or 13. That's why we had, sometimes, 15 or 16 hour days."
cinemajesty Movie Review: "The Last of the Mohicans" (1992)Based on an original book, published in 1826, by an author spawning from the liberated United States James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851), adapted and to shooting draft polishings in season 1990/1991 by director Michael Mann and his co-writer Christopher Crowe, when the filmmakers at Morgan Creek Productions, with exclusive distribution deals at 20th Century Fox at the time, could not get any luckier by committing actor Daniel Day-Lewis to play an adopted-orphan of presumed dead pioneer-parents to become Native-American-mimicking character of "Hawkeye" giving safe passage for two sisters, portrayed by innocence-to-courage finding actresses Madeleine Stowe and Jodhi May at age 16, send-off by a struggling father duties-favoring British Colonel through French-Army raging North American territory, when post-independence-war real-life-inherent of the tribe of Sioux turning actor Russell Means (1939-2012) brings magically moments on 35mm film to life; where ultra-raw-violence- striking nemesis of foreign Native tribe leading character of Magua, here portrayed in impeccable natural brutality to graphic visual beat-strikes by actor Wes Studi.Circumstances, which benefit an highly-suspenseful adventure movie with a sophisticated emotional story arc through-out in a 105-Minute-Editorial by Dov Hoenig & Arthur Schmidt in somehow strugglesome post-productions of total 11 months without any major given post f/x effects needed to a Non-festival World Premiere on August 26th 1992 in Paris, France; only when the public relation department surrounding executive producer James G. Robinson hardly makes a stand in crowded award season competitions, losing against Academy Award Motion Picture of Arts and Science favorites for Best Picture 1992, which remain in favors for "Howard's End" produced by Ismail Merchant (1936-2005) and directed to perfect dedication by James Ivory; to must-have succession on suspense-neglecting Universal Pictures' intellectual Al Pacino starring-tentpole "Scent of a Woman" produced as directed by Martin Brest; where "The Last of the Mohicans" delivers with tedious production design by Wolf Kroeger alongside beautiful as elegant cinematography orchestrated by Dante Spinotti to total seven British Academy of Film and Television Arts nominations and two wins for lighting camera works and make up effects.© 2018 Felix Alexander Dausend (Cinemajesty Entertainments LLC)
anthonymcdonald150 Loved this movie, Day-Lewis and Stowe are so good when acting off one another in close up like after the Cameron massacre. Day-Lewis as gives us such a tight performance. His playing against been an English type is as per usual. He does not seem able to take up the battle for the land of his father in any work. What happened to him walking and talking to the Celts of Western Europe has a profound effect on his craft, as one born in London at about the same time but brought back "Home" so often I never can recall ever feeling anything but not English. It's the strangest belonging. An Englishman can be British, an Irishman can be nothing else. This forms such moments in "The Mohicans" when there are stretches of silence between Stowe and Day-Lewis. Mann's making (rather than) directing is not like any other movie I know of his. He trusts the cast to play their parts with such honesty and the gorgeous New York Hudson Valley background, the colours, sounds, the Bobcat looking at Stowe are a delight, are a full star in their own right. This movie is not like anything that is made now, maybe it too is the last hurrah of a by gone age just like the Mohican. Watch, watch it slowly, catch as much as you can and come back to it again some night you are on your own. I think it may become one of your all time favorite movies. Enjoy
Fluke_Skywalker Plot; The white adopted son of a Mohican Chief and the daughter of a British Colonel fall in love against the backdrop of the French and Indian War.Walking a very fine line between historical drama and overheated melodrama, The Last of the Mohicans never quite excels at either. Nevertheless, it's reasonably compelling thanks to top shelf performances from its cast, an epic score by Trevor Jones (with a late game assist by Randy Edelman) and the steady hand of director Michael Mann.