Chuck Connors plays the famed Apache warrior, who agrees to try reservation life. But it’s a short-lived peace.
Geronimo is immediately concerned because the Indian agent orders his men’s horses seized and given back to the “rightful owners.”
The whites seem to care little about whether he and other former Apache warriors are stripped of their self-respect. They just want them to behave.
The real trouble starts when crooked whites — cavalry and reservation agents, alike — conspire to sell the portion of the San Carlos reservation where the Apaches have been raising crops.
Geronimo organizes a breakout and decides to wage a tireless war. His hope: To convince Mr. Washington himself to visit the Apaches with a new treaty that shows respect for the their lifestyle.
Wanting a son, Geronimo also kidnaps Teela, a lovely reservation Indian. But she sees no hope in a war-like existence and fears her child will die of starvation.
Sure enough, food is soon in short supply. And Geronimo finds himself facing the entire might of the U.S. cavalry, with a small band of 20 warriors by his side.
Geronimo gets the hero treatment in this so-so film. It certainly shows little regard for history. The last time Geronimo surrendered in real life, he was shipped off to a reservation in Florida and never allowed to return to his homeland.
Connors looks buff and warrior-like in the lead role, if you can get past his blue eyes. Kamala Devi, who plays the educated reservation girl he decides to haul off and impregnate, actually became Connors’ real-wife a year after this film was released.
And Adam West, with “Batman” fame still on the horizon, has a fairly large role as a cavalry officer sympathetic to the Indian’s plight.
As for the villains, we get Capt. Maynard as a cavalry officer who would prefer to see all the Apaches dead and John Anderson as the Bible-thumping Indian agent who doesn’t hesitate to sell land out from under them, if the price is right.
The film features some good action sequences, and some silliness. As for the latter, there’s a scene in which a ranch woman catches a group of Apache warriors stealing oats from her barn. She invites them to share the chicken she was fixing for dinner, but insists on saying grace before they chow down.
Directed by:
Arnold Laven
Cast:
Chuck Connors … Geronimo
Pat Conway … Capt. Maynard
Armando Silvestre … Natchez
Ross Martin … Mangus
Kamala Devi … Teela
Adam West … Lt. Delahay
John Anderson … Jeremiah Burns
Lawrence Dobkin … Gen. Crook
Enid Jaynes … Huera
Denver Pyle … Sen. Conrad
Nancy Rodman … Mrs. Marsh
Amanda Ames … Mrs. Burns
Eduardo Noreiga … Col. Morales
Joe Higgins … Kincaide
Mario Navarro … Giantah
Runtime: 101 min.
Memorable lines:
Mrs. Burns, as Geronimo arrives at San Carlos reservation: “Do you think they’ll be trouble?”
Jeremiah Burns: “Trouble? I don’t think so. It will take more than a child of the devil to beat the Lord.”
Mangus to Geronimo: “They don’t understand us. So we do the best we can. At least we are still alive.”
Teela, after Geronimo has pinned one of her school books to a tree by firing an arrow in her direction: “Would you please come and get your arrow out of my book?”
Geronimo: “You’re right. It’s a good arrow. It shouldn’t be wasted.”