Soldier Blue (1970)

When a U.S. army payroll caravan is ambushed by a group of hostile Cheyenne warriors and wiped out, the lone survivors -- a young cavalry private, and a recently liberated female captive -- must make their way through hostile terrain to the safety of the fort, avoiding the hostiles and conquering the lingering hostility between the two of them without getting killed or killing each other.

And as our oil-and-water couple draw closer to their goal, and are drawn closer together, outside forces threaten to tear them apart as the film comes full circle and culminates in another, senseless tragedy…

Director Ralph Nelson made his bones on the small screen during the high-pressure stakes of live broadcasting, with lofty credits that included episodes of The Dupont Show of the Month, Climax!, and Playhouse 90; the latter of which earned him a much deserved Emmy when he collaborated with Rod Serling for Requiem for a Heavyweight (Playhouse 90, S1.E2, 1956).

Nelson then made the jump to the big screen when producer David Susskind tabbed him for Columbia Pictures' theatrical adaptation of the same screenplay in 1962. More films followed; and like his former TV partner Serling, Nelson gravitated toward projects that threw a glaring spotlight on society's ills.

Ralph Nelson and Sidney Poitier.

Nelson produced and directed Lilies of the Field (1963), an earnest but fluffy film, where an itinerant worker is conned by some destitute nuns into building them a chapel, which earned Sidney Poitier an Academy Award. Seeing it today, it might leave folks scratching their heads over what all the hub-bub was about when it was first released is, I think, a not so sweet and fluffy indictment on the state of racial relations in this country circa 1963 that still poorly reflects back on today.

Sticking with the theme, Nelson teamed up with Poitier again for the criminally under-appreciated western, Duel at Diablo (1966), where the color lines are blurred even further with the story of a white woman (Bibbi Anderson), who spent several years as an Apache captive, who is now ostracized upon her liberation as defiled goods -- better dead than red, if you catch my drift. But the woman is also equally shunned by her former captors when she tries to return and reunite with her half-breed baby.

...tick...tick...tick... (1970), meanwhile, is a high-tension time-bomb ready to blow when a newly elected black sheriff (Jim Brown) takes office in a racially divided southern town, with the mayor (Fredric March), the deposed sheriff (George Kennedy), and the KKK questioning and countering his every move.

Soldier Blue (1970) is more of the same, where once again, Nelson makes the audience look in the mirror to face man's inhumanity toward his fellow man based solely on the 3-Cs: Color, Culture, and Creed.

However, based on Theodore V. Olsen's novel Arrow in the Sun, Soldier Blue is less of a revisionist western and more of an allegorical and timely tale on the horrors of the Vietnam War.

By the time of the film's production in 1969, the truth was finally filtering out about the events surrounding the notorious Mỹ Lai Massacre, where a company of U.S. soldiers wiped out a village of Vietnamese civilians, mostly women, children and the elderly without cause.

As this cover-up was torn apart and details of the brutality that took place that day leaked out, with horrid tales of rape, torture, and mutilation, this travesty proved eerily familiar to a similar blot on the American military record books that happened nearly a century before, where a detachment of militia wiped out a village of friendly Cheyenne and Arapaho natives in the same fashion near Sand Creek, Colorado; which, by the way, is the major incident on which Olsen's novel is based. Coincidence? I think not 

Gender roles also take a thorough throttling with our frontier odd couple. Here, sticking with the Vietnam allegory, Candace Bergen's foul-mouthed Cresta Lee comes off as a proto-Murphy Brown. Radicalized, she has tuned in, dropped out, and returned to nature, an ersatz Cheyenne Jane in buckskins; and it's her skills, instincts, and intuition that keeps them both alive as they traverse the frontier.

I do find it interesting that it's never made clear how Cresta came to be 'liberated' in the first place. Was she rescued? From what little info we do get we glean that she left the tribe voluntarily because even though she may "look like an Indian, talk like an Indian, and act like an Indian," she wasn't. 

However, it quickly becomes clear as she slowly strips off her new dress and accouterments as to where she really belongs, metaphorically speaking.

Peter Strauss' Honus, on the other hand, is very prudish, effeminate, quick to tears, and clings to archaic notions of civility and religion that are both painful to watch and painfully stripped away at every turn. And it's these very notions that tend to get our couple into trouble.

Of course, then, they're destined to fall in love, as Honus finally sees the light. And, like in most of these allegorical tales, it only took the deaths of hundreds if not thousands of people to get that point across.

Though preoccupied by its message and book-ended by two graphic massacres, Soldier Blue does have its moments of levity and humor. I especially love the moment when Honus is more interested in covering Cresta's exposed derriere than chewing through the ropes binding her hands after they're captured by the gun-runner (Donald Pleasance).

There's more, but sadly, not enough to balance out the scenes where Nelson beats the audience around the head and neck with his Mighty Clown Hammer of Morality. Thus, by the time we reach the bloody conclusion at Sand Creek, with the raping and the pillaging and the dismemberment, I fear the audience might not be listening anymore.

For in the end, Nelson might have been aiming for our hearts and minds, but instead, hit a direct bulls-eye on our collective upset stomach.

Originally posted on June 14, 2011, at Micro-Brewed Reviews.

Soldier Blue (1970) Katzka-Loeb-AVCO-Embassy / EP: Joseph E. Levine / P: Gabriel Katzka, Harold Loeb / AP: William S. Gilmore / D: Ralph Nelson / W: John Gay / C: Robert B. Hauser / E: Alex Beaton / S: Candice Bergen, Peter Strauss, Donald Pleasence, John Anderson

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