Northwest
Passage is one of the lesser-known great Epic pictures. Its budget
was larger than the previously more costly epic, Ben-Hur. They would have spent more money, but the studio pulled in
the reins. Northwest Passage was
based on the book written by Kenneth Roberts in the ‘30s. It competed strongly
with “Gone with the Wind” for the best-seller slot, but never managed to
dethrone “Gone with the Wind.” MGM decided to cash in on the book’s popularity.
Originally two movies were planned. The first movie, or “Book 1,” would cover
Rogers’ Rangers’ various skirmishes at the time of the French and Indian war. “Book
2” would cover Rogers’ Rangers as they searched for the Northwest Passage.
Kenneth Roberts accurately portrayed the thoughts and feelings of the settlers
towards the Indians. It’s not pretty in the book and it’s not pretty on the
screen. Even by 1940s’ standards, the racist stereotypes in Northwest Passage were a bit over the
top. Roberts thought the fix was in for not making a sequel because one key
character to both stories was left out of the movie. He was also very unhappy
with how the movie was adapted. Maybe the fix was in, or maybe it became clear to
MGM that Northwest Passage was not
going to have a strong enough return to merit a second movie. Regardless, what
we have is a grand epic that is an embarrassment to the populace that would
like to think of itself as culturally sensitive—and a misleading title because
the only mention of the Northwest Passage is at the end of the movie. So, if
you can stand a grand Hollywood epic which depicts a massacre of Indians in
outrageous Technicolor, this is the film for you.
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Wednesday, August 8, 2018
The Comic Critic Reviews "Northwest Passage"
Labels:
1940,
frontier,
Indians,
Kenneth Roberts,
MGM,
racist,
Robert Young,
scalps,
Spencer Tracy
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1 comment:
I've not seen the movie, but read the book while I was still in grade school, thanks to a grandmother with books by Kenneth Roberts and Thomas Costain on her shelves. (I've acquired all of them, thanks to second-hand bookstores over the decades.)
Some of Roberts' historical novels are less racist, but they're not high on my I-must-reread-these list. (However, am very much a fan of H. Rider Haggard...)
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