PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,4/10
218
TU PUNTUACIÓN
A pesar de que los miembros de su tribu se niegan, un joven indio se empeña en cuidar y criar a un potro salvaje.A pesar de que los miembros de su tribu se niegan, un joven indio se empeña en cuidar y criar a un potro salvaje.A pesar de que los miembros de su tribu se niegan, un joven indio se empeña en cuidar y criar a un potro salvaje.
Imágenes
George J. Lewis
- Nopawallo
- (as George Lewis)
Bill Blackwell
- Sutako
- (as William Blackwell)
Robert Crawford Jr.
- Wacopi
- (sin acreditar)
Ken Miller
- Comanche Villager
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFinal film of Pat Hogan.
- PifiasIt is stated in the opening narration, that the story takes place 'before the white man' had come to the Americas, and that young Indian (Native American) boys grow up riding horses. Horses, in their modern form, were not present in the Americas until the 'white man' (Europeans) arrived, bringing them.
Reseña destacada
Such A Silly Error About PreColumbian Indians
If Indian Paint hadn't started out with a bad historical error I might have given it a star or two higher rating. But even a B independent picture should not have made such a bad mistake. Right at the beginning the narrator says that the story is set in the time before the white man came to the western hemisphere and the Indians who are plains Indians are all riding horses.
Even high school history students know that the horse came to America first from Cortes who let his stock run free and multiply in Mexico. Horses gradually moved north or were traded north by tribes to the south to their northern brethren who envied what could be done on horseback.
Such an incredibly silly error mars a very nice story of a young Indian boy coming of age as a warrior through his love and care for a wild colt that everyone else says can't be broken. Jay Silverheels is the chief of the Arikawaha tribe and he's got considerably more dialog than what he used to have in The Lone Ranger.
Silverheels's son is Johnny Crawford two years from The Rifleman and trying to keep his career alive as a teenage heartthrob. He plays the lad trying to tame the wild colt and has quite a few adventures in the process.
Some criticism is voiced about not having American Indian players in the roles that whites have in this film. Take a look at the credits and you'll see one Robert Crawford, Sr. is the associate producer of Indian Paint. That should answer the question why his Johnny was cast in the lead. Please note that Robert Crawford, Jr. who was a regular in the Laramie series while Johnny was on The Rifleman is cast as Johnny's best friend. I think this is the last time the Crawford brothers worked together on a project.
Indian Paint was shot on a shoestring completely outdoors in Texas where the action would have taken place a few hundred years earlier. It does lack some production values that a big studio could have given, but it's still a nice story, good family viewing.
But let no one come away with the fact that horses were being ridden before Columbus got here.
Even high school history students know that the horse came to America first from Cortes who let his stock run free and multiply in Mexico. Horses gradually moved north or were traded north by tribes to the south to their northern brethren who envied what could be done on horseback.
Such an incredibly silly error mars a very nice story of a young Indian boy coming of age as a warrior through his love and care for a wild colt that everyone else says can't be broken. Jay Silverheels is the chief of the Arikawaha tribe and he's got considerably more dialog than what he used to have in The Lone Ranger.
Silverheels's son is Johnny Crawford two years from The Rifleman and trying to keep his career alive as a teenage heartthrob. He plays the lad trying to tame the wild colt and has quite a few adventures in the process.
Some criticism is voiced about not having American Indian players in the roles that whites have in this film. Take a look at the credits and you'll see one Robert Crawford, Sr. is the associate producer of Indian Paint. That should answer the question why his Johnny was cast in the lead. Please note that Robert Crawford, Jr. who was a regular in the Laramie series while Johnny was on The Rifleman is cast as Johnny's best friend. I think this is the last time the Crawford brothers worked together on a project.
Indian Paint was shot on a shoestring completely outdoors in Texas where the action would have taken place a few hundred years earlier. It does lack some production values that a big studio could have given, but it's still a nice story, good family viewing.
But let no one come away with the fact that horses were being ridden before Columbus got here.
útil•62
- bkoganbing
- 21 feb 2010
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What is the English language plot outline for La gran aventura india (1965)?
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