The Last of the Mohicans
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Michael Mann
Daniel Day-lewis
Madeleine Stowe
Colm Meaney
Russell Means
Wes Studi
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Epic adventure and romance set against the backdrop of the war raging between England and France and each side's Native American allies, across the frontier beyond Albany, New York. The frontiersman Hawkeye, adopted son of the Mohican Chingachgook, and Cora Munro, the daughter of an English officer, become lovers, and the fates of their families become intertwined as the war and the Huron war captain, Magua, threaten to destroy them.
Cast
Daniel Day-lewis
Madeleine Stowe
Colm Meaney
Russell Means
Wes Studi
Alice Papineau
William J Bozic
Dennis J Banks
Malcolm Storry
Jodhi May
Steven Waddington
Thomas E Cummings
Dylan Baker
Mark J Maracle
Maurice Roeves
Eric D Sandgren
Mac Andrews
Patrick Fitzgerald
Scott Means
Justin M Rice
Thomas John Mcgowan
Mark Joy
Tim Hopper
Steve Keator
Victor Zolfo
Sebastian Roché
Michael Mcconnell
Eric Schweig
Patrice Chéreau
David Mark Farrow
Eric A Hurley
F Curtis Gaston
Jared Harris
Ethan James Fugate
David Schofield
Pete Postlethwaite
Tracey Ellis
Joe Finnegan
Mike Phillips
Edward Blatchford
Gregory Zaragoza
Terry Kinney
Sheila Adams Barnhill
Don Tilley
Clark Heathcliffe
Crew
Elton Ahi
Willy Allen
Mary Andrews
Gordon Antell
Albert Aquino
Bonnie Arnold
Michele S Atkins
Karen M. Baker
John L. Balderston
John L. Balderston
David Baldwin
Deborah R Ball
Jeff Balsmeyer
Keith T Barber
Moe Bardach
Timothy Barnett
Stanton Barrett
Kevin Bartnof
Eric G Bartsch
Ryan Bartsch
Monte E Bass
Gregg Baxter
John R Bayless
Paul Beahm
Kevin Beard
Ingrid Behrens
Virgil Ben
Dennis Benda
Lon Bender
Jeff Berger
Logan Berkshire
Terrie Berlin
Carlo Bernard
Paul F Bernard
Porter Berry
Judy Bickerton
Michael Bigham
Linda Biondo
Jeff Block
Jerry Blohm
Judith Blume
Kathleen Bobak
Simone Boisseree
Michael Bonsignore
Matthew Booth
George Bosley
Sondra Dee Boyachek
Kevin P. Boyd
Connie Boyer
Dennis Bradford
Bruce Bradley
Timothy L Braniff
Ted Brasser
Ciaran Brennan
Mark S Brien
David Brink
John T Bromell
Catherine Brown
Roy C Bryson
Douglas Burchfield
James Stuart Burns
Tracy Burns
Gary Burritt
Brian Burrows
Jennifer Butler
Michael B Butler
Jerry G Callaway
Jerry G Callaway
Evan Campbell
Steve D Campbell
Daniel A Carlin
Daniel A Carlin
Eva M Carlyon
Verene Caruso
Frederick Cassidy
Gusmano Cesaretti
Mark Chadwick
R J Chambers
Todd Charmont
Cary Mitchell Chavis
Caroline Clements
Duke Power Company
Frank Connor
Thomas C Cook
James Fenimore Cooper
John Copeman
William F Craine
Carole T Crews
Vern Crofoot
Christopher Crowe
Shirley Fulton Crumley
Phil Cunningham
Phil Cunningham
Jack Dalton
Richard A Davis
Sandy De Crescent
Jennifer C Debell
Brad Dechter
Mary Lou Devlin
Guy Digal
Dale Dione
Mark A Dixon
Russell J Dodson
Ned Dowd
Ned Dowd
Ron Downing
Nick Dudman
Philip Dunne
Philip Dunne
Richard Duran
Kathy Durning
Richard Dwan
Dale Dye
Daniel Eccleston
Sean Daniel Eccleston
Bernadette C Echohawk
Randy Edelman
Randy Edelman
Mary Kate Edmonstone
Jim Erickson
John D Evers
Mitchell Factor
Dianne Fennell
Dale E Fetzer
Eddie Fickett
Brigitte Fiedler
Susie Figgis
Susan Fiore
Jay K. Fishburn
Christopher M Fisher
Paula Fisher
Scott R. Fisher
Thomas L. Fisher
Christian Fletcher
David Fletcher
Billy Joe Fredericks
Jason Free
Jennifer Freed
Brian Frejo
Kellie Frost
Jason Fruchter
Ruth Fletcher Gage
David Galbraith
Drew Lynn Gardner
Gerrit Garretsen
Peter Gelfman
Anne Gentling
Scott Gershin
Nerses Gezalyan
Prior Gibson
Lance Gilbert
Mickey Gilbert
Tim Gilbert
Troy Gilbert
Ray Giron
Julie Lynn Glick
Titus D Glover Jr.
Carl Goldstein
Lisa Goncalves
Jeff Goodwin
Marilyn Graf
Laura Graham
Rufus Granger
Darlene Ka-mook Grant
Rocert E Gravel
Alan Greedy
Whitney Green
Pierre L Griffen
Kenneth Grindstaff
Vincent J. Guastini
Robert Guerra
Mitzi Gunter
Patricia Ann Gura
Daniel Haizlip
Angela Hajianis
Per Hallberg
Randy Halpern
Sherry Ham
Gloria Hancock
Shari Hangar
Roger Hansen
Robert O Hardridge
J Mitchell Harris
Dwayne Hatchell
James Hawzipta
Philip Haythornthwaite
Dan Hegeman
Doris Hellmann
D. M. Hemphill
Gail Hensley
Harold E Hensley
Richard Hensley
Phil Hetos
Whitney Heuermann
Tina Hightower
Hilda Hodges
Robert G Hoelen
Dov Hoenig
Chris Hogan
Dannie Hogan
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Wins
Best Sound
Articles
The Last of the Mohicans (1992)
Hawkeye and Uncas have no investment in this battle ("I ain't your scout and I sure ain't in no damn militia," challenges Hawkeye when a British officer attempts to recruit settlers) until they fall in love with the daughters of Colonel Munro, the British commander of a fort under siege by the French. The younger Uncas is entranced by Alice (Jodhi May) while Hawkeye clashes with the strong-willed beauty Cora (Madeleine Stowe), a striking English Rose in the New World. With skin like porcelain and the poise of a lady, Stowe offers a Cora whose initial shock at the brutality in this wilderness is replaced by awe and excitement even as the frontier becomes deadly. Her initial British patriotism gives way to respect for the settlers and passion for Hawkeye and the honesty of his life, especially when contrasted with Major Duncan Heyward (Steven Waddington), the proper British officer who places patriotism and class allegiance over truth and justice. The seeds of American identity are sown as the British break their contract with the members of the local militia, privileging rank and power and duty to the crown's political interest over the protection of the settlers on the frontier whose homesteads are vulnerable to the war parties backed by the French. It's "tyranny," proclaims one settler, a term that resonates in the birth of the American Revolution.
Though set twenty years before the declaration of independence, Mann offers a portrait of a country and a people who have already redefined themselves. The British march in with notions of duty and ritual and authority that have no place in the wilderness, and ideas of warfare out of touch with the realities of this world. The early scenes of British society in the American landscape have a carefully composed beauty that recalls Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon (1975) with scenes that resemble formal paintings. Once Heyward heads into the untamed wilderness with Cora and Alice, the red uniforms and formal training of his troops are glaringly at odds with the primal Eden. Hawkeye and his brother, by contrast, move through the forest like they are one with it.
The Last of the Mohicans was an unexpected project for Mann. His previous films had all been resolutely urban and focused on professionals on both sides of the law squaring off against one another. Hawkeye and Uncas flee society to live in the wilderness but like Mann's traditional heroes, they are the best at what they do and only beholden to their family. The most characteristically "Mann" moment of the film observes their careful preparations to give cover to a courier running for help - the fluid movements of the wordless routine as they hand off spent rifles and take aim with a new weapon, and the precision of their shots with the single-shot muzzle-load rifles (which Hawkeye packs with silk to give him greater distance). The lanky Day-Lewis underwent a rigorous schedule of fitness training to build muscle and a six month study of wilderness skills, from tracking animals and building canoes to fighting with tomahawks and loading and firing a flintlock on the run, to prepare for the role. But where the heroes of Mann's crime dramas sacrifice personal lives to professionalism, the lives and allegiances of Hawkeye and Uncas change when they fall in love with the two Duncan girls. Theirs is a romantic story and this is Mann's most deliriously romantic movie.
Though set in upstate New York, Mann took his production to Western North Carolina and the Appalachian mountains of Alabama to find the dense wilds and rugged wilderness the film called for. Longtime Mann cinematographer Dante Spinotti captures this like a vivid nature study with an impressionist perspective and realist detail (Spinotti earned a BAFTA, the British equivalent to an Oscar®, for his cinematography). The production called for over a thousand extras, including hundreds of Indian roles which Mann cast with Native Americans, largely Iroquois. Indian rights activist Russell Means made his screen debut as Chingachgook, a small part but a central role that demanded a strong presence. Eric Schweig, a Canadian-born actor of Inuit descent with a few roles to his credit, was cast as the quiet but athletic young Uncus, younger brother to Hawkeye. And Wes Studi, a Cherokee who had memorably played the silent American Indian in Oliver Stone's The Doors (1991), launched a very successful career with his performance as the vengeful Magua. He subsequently went on to play the title role in Geronimo: American Legend (1993) and a central character in Mann's 1995 crime thriller Heat, among his many roles.
The Last of the Mohicans was made in the wake of Dances with Wolves (1990) and, like that Oscar®-winning film, it's a portrait of a culture that is being displaced by a new society coming in and taking over the land. But while the title of the film refers to Chingachgook, the last Chief of the Mohican tribe, and his blood son Uncas, the last full-blooded Mohican, the story of Uncas and his romance with Alice (which is the focus of the 1920 silent version) is left to the margins of this film. This story is about the white man adopted into the native way of life. It's also a portrait of a short-lived time of peaceful coexistence between the early American settlers and the Native Americans, at least until the armies from the European powers march in to stake their political claim to the land and stir up local Indian tribes to join in their war. The Last of the Mohicans mourns that ideal even as it celebrates the union of Hawkeye and Cora, the strong, rugged and distinctly American couple who will define the new Americans as the country is being born.
Producer: Hunt Lowry, Michael Mann
Director: Michael Mann
Screenplay: Michael Mann, Christopher Crowe (both screenplay); Philip Dunne (1936 screenplay); John L. Balderston, Paul Perez, Daniel Moore (all adaptation); James Fenimore Cooper (novel)
Cinematography: Dante Spinotti
Art Direction: Robert Guerra, Richard Holland
Music: Randy Edelman, Trevor Jones
Film Editing: Dov Hoenig, Arthur Schmidt
Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis (Hawkeye (Nathaniel Poe)), Madeleine Stowe (Cora Munro), Russell Means (Chingachgook), Eric Schweig (Uncas), Jodhi May (Alice Munro), Steven Waddington (Maj. Duncan Heyward), Wes Studi (Magua), Maurice Roëves (Col. Edmund Munro), Patrice Chéreau (Gen Montcalm), Edward Blatchford (Jack Winthrop).
C-112m. Letterboxed. Descriptive Video.
by Sean Axmaker
The Last of the Mohicans (1992)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall September 25, 1992
Released in United States on Video March 10, 1993
Fifth feature film adaptation of James Fenimore Cooper's novel: in 1920, directed by Clarence Brown; in 1932, directed by B Reeves Eason and Ford Beebe; in 1936, directed by George B Seitz and in 1968 directed by Romania's Sergiu Nicolaescu.
Based on the novel "The Last of the Mohicans" written by James Fenimore Cooper and published in 1826.
Douglas Milsome was replaced by Dante Spinotti as director of photography. Also, during shooting, costume designer James Acheson left the production.
Began shooting June 17, 1991.
Completed shooting October 10, 1991.
Released in United States Fall September 25, 1992
Released in United States on Video March 10, 1993