Apache Woman (1976)
7/10
Wig-wam bam, gonna make you my man.
21 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
For decades, cinema depicted the Native American as a bloodthirsty savage, enemy of the heroic cowboy; then, in the 1970s, Hollywood developed a conscience, and tried to right wrongs with revisionist westerns in which Indians were seen as noble warriors defending their land from the scourge of the white man. Naturally, Italian exploitation cinema quickly followed suit...

Apache Woman stars Al Cliver as Tommy, who is part of a cavalry detail under orders to drive wandering natives back to their reservation. As his fellow soldiers ride into an Apache village, Tommy is unseated and knocked unconscious; when he comes to, he discovers that a massacre has taken place, the only surviving Indian being a beautiful squaw (Clara Hopf). In the following days, Tommy and the woman rely on each other to survive in a land inhabited by ruthless outlaws and misguided folk who believe that the only good injun is a dead injun. Eventually, the couple fall in love, but can a white man truly find happiness with a redskin?

Drawing inspiration from Soldier Blue (1970), writer/director Giorgio Mariuzzo makes his movie sympathetic to the plight of the indigenous people of America, but being an Italian film-maker, doesn't forget to include enough exploitative content to ensure an audience eager for basic thrills. The result is a gritty adventure that delivers drama, excitement, violence and nudity (Hopf baring all for her art), and yet is surprisingly emotionally engaging, making the downbeat ending quite the shocker.
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