“Jeb,
I'm frightened. That boy is crippled for life. And that man on the train, he
died for a principle. A man killed for a principle. One of them is wrong, but
which one?”
“Who
knows the answer to that, Kit. Everybody in America is trying to decide.”
“Yes,
by words from the east, and by guns from the west. But one day, the words will
turn into guns.”
Santa Fe Trail
is one of those films that I watched because I like the actors in it. I had to
see this because I adore Olivia de Havilland and like her pairing with Errol
Flynn. What I got was an almost two hour bore fest.
Jeb Stuart (Flynn) is a student at West Point before the Civil
War. He is from the south and constantly gets into arguments with a northerner
named Rader (Van Heflin) about slavery and southern attitudes. Jeb does not
really argue he listens to Rader belittling the south and holds his tongue. Jeb’s
friends George Custer (Ronald Reagan) and Bob Holliday are usually the ones to
fire back with something to Rader. Jeb finally fights back one night when Rader
goes too far. He is brought into the office of the head of the college, General
Robert E. Lee. George, Bob, and a few other of Jeb’s friends back him up and
say they were also part of the fight. General Lee punishes the group by sending
them out to a fort in the middle of the Kansas Territory. For Rader he has
expelled from the school.
At graduation, Bob’s father and sister are in the
audience. His sister Kit yells out in excitement when his name. Everyone looks
at her including George and Jeb. For the rest of the graduation Kit looks over
by Jeb and George and afterwards they each try to flirt with her.
Jeb, Bob, George, Kit and their father are all on the
train out to the Kansas Territory. The father tells the soldiers that they are
being sent out there because the territory is not a state and it does not know
whether it wants to enter the Union as a slave state or free state and a rouser
named John Brown has been causing trouble to free the slaves. On the train are
slave hunters who are looking to bring back slaves that have run away. The slaves
are on the train with John Brown’s brother. The brother is thrown off the train
and another man is hurt after their altercation.
There is more to the story but it got really boring and I
stopped paying attention. What a great movie reviewer I am I know, I know. The rest
of the film is just a back and forth of Jeb’s troop trying to get a hold of
John Brown and stopping his rebellion. And if you know your USA history in any
way you will know that Brown is captured at Harper’s Ferry (and I only remember
that because there is a really nice painting of the moment Brown is arrested in
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City).
Santa Fe Trail
is not a well known classic film and probably the only reason why it is known
at all today is because it is a film pairing Olivia de Havilland and Errol
Flynn and Ronald Reagan is in it. I hate the fact that de Havilland was throw
in this film as just a love interest. There really was no reason whatsoever for
her to be in this a lesser actress could have been cast instead. Michael Curtiz’s
direction is as always is great. Unless you are a fan of Errol Flynn and Olivia
de Havilland together or Ronald Reagan (or just curious to see a president as
an actor) Santa Fe Trail is not
really worth the time to watch. It was not terrible it was just boring and
long. Santa Fe Trail is available to view in full on YouTube.
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