Jasmin Jandreau is Amelia a young bride convinced to leave her home and family behind for a new life in California. Levi, her husband, has heard a tale about gold being found there. He promises her a brighter future awaits if they just head West.
Several weeks into the trip, he decides to veer away from the wagon train and take a route sure to shave a month off their journey and get them to the promised land earlier. Then Indians attack, killing Levi and stealing the horses pulling their wagon, but leaving Amelia unscathed.
But finding her way out of the harsh wilderness will be anything but easy for a god-fearing woman who’s been brought up to be a good housewife, but has few survival skills, very few rations and keeps stumbling across warnings of just how difficult her lone journey will be.
Then she comes across a young Indian boy, also seemingly lost, who follows her on the journey, giving her a new reason not to give up hope.
An acting tour de force for Jandreau, who is on screen nearly 100 percent of the time and has to carry what turns into a heart-touching film.
Just be aware of what you’re sitting down to watch. There’s no dialogue for the first nine minutes, just four characters and just one focus – Amelia’s attempt to survive long enough to reach civilization. If you’re looking for an action filled shoot-‘em-up, look elsewhere.
This is also a religious film. Amelia is a devout Christian. When she’s deciding what to take with her on her journey, she can’t stand to leave her Bible behind. Her faith wavers from time to time. At one point, she lays down to die, certain she can’t go on.
But God has hardly abandoned her. If anything, he’s given her a guardian angel to assist on her journey. There’s a seriously misplaced “God is everywhere” soliloquy near the end of the film. Otherwise, the religious overtones help rather than hinder the story.
Directed by:
William Parker
Cast:
Jasmin Jandreau … Amelia
Shannon Brown … Indian boy
Tommy Nash … Levi
Brianna Oppenheimer … Christina
Runtime: 92 min.
aka: Let God
Memorable lines:
Levi to Amelia: “This is our destiny. There’s something out there for you and me. For us as a family.”
Amelia, kneeling by Levi’s grave: “How could you let this happen?”
The trail is really a great movie I felt compelled to watch it to the very end and I had a few happy joyful tears at the end so when you start watching it watch it to the end