Little Big Man (1970) Reviews

Little Big Man (1970)
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Recounting how the West was won through the eyes of a white man raised as a Native American, Arthur Penn's 1970 adaptation of Thomas Berger's satirical novel was a comic yet stinging allegory about the bloody results of American imperialism. As a misguided 20th-century historian listens, 121-year-old Jack Crabb (Dustin Hoffman) narrates the story of being the only white survivor of Custer's Last Stand. White orphan Crabb was adopted by the Cheyenne, renamed "Little Big Man," and raised in the ways of the "Human Beings" by paternal mentor Old Lodge Skins (Chief Dan George), accepting non-conformity and living peacefully with nature. Violently thrust into the white world, Jack meets a righteous preacher (Thayer David) and his wife (Faye Dunaway), tries to be a gunfighter under the tutelage of Wild Bill Hickock (Jeff Corey), and gets married. Returned to the Cheyenne by chance, Jack prefers life as a Human Being. The carnage wreaked by the white man in the Washita massacre and the lethal fallout from the egomania of General George A. Custer (Richard Mulligan) at Little Big Horn, however, show Crabb the horrific implications of Old Lodge Skins' sage observation, "There is an endless supply of White Men, but there has always been a limited number of Human Beings." ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi

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Starring:
Dustin HoffmanFaye Dunaway, (more)
Director(s):
Arthur Penn
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG13
Format(s):
DVD  |  Blu-ray
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Average Ratings

(35 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


Donna E.

This is a movie I would have in my collection...and there are very very few I would actually own. I don't even particularly like westerns, but the story in this movie is so good! I've seen this movie many times because every so often I just have to watch it again...like a good book that you re-read every few years.

Yes   |   No


Kevin T.

Though this certainly isn't a documentary, it does give us some insight into how the Native Americans were treated. Dustin Hoffman at his best. I love this movie. 5-STARS

Yes   |   No


William W.

I was 18 when this movie came out im now 58.I just saw it again after all these years and it was just as good and sad just like i remembered.We the white man REALLY screwed the native Americans they were called human beings in Little Big Man and they were.The whites especially the soldiers were nothing more than a bunch of hired killers.Dustin Hoffman plays such a great role along with native grandfather Chief Dan George if you havent seen Little Big Man do so.

Yes   |   No


Marylynn M.

goood story

Yes   |   No


Andrea P.

This is a tragicomic treatment of serious historical issues: the near-elimination of the Human Beings (Cheyenne) by treaty-breaking and murderous White men; raids and wars between and among different Indian nations; and unprovoked Indian attacks on peaceful White settlers. Both Jack Crabb and Old Lodge Skins come to realize at different times that this is a crazy world, and each at one point decides that "this is a good day to die". However, since that is rarely our decision to make, Crabb lives to be 121 years old at the time that he narrates this film. He has a thing or two to tell a young journalist, who, in his youthful arrogance, thinks he knows more about history than the man who actually lived it, and thereby hangs this tale. I was largely unimpressed by the acting (except for the performances of Richard Mulligan and Chief Dan George) but enjoyed the film, nevertheless. Also, I do wish Cheyenne had actually been spoken; it would have lent the film a healthy dose of realism.

Yes   |   No


Linda C.

We had trouble watching one scene when the DVD skipped. This movie was recommended as a good movie to start a discussion about the killing of Native Americans for a Civics class. But there were several 'creative liberties' that got in the way of the historical issues that were being portrayed. Dances With Wolves is a better choice for a discussion starter, I think.

Yes   |   No


Robert and Myrna K.

One of the best.

Yes   |   No


Richard T.

It is the same funny movie it is. Not much to say about it, for forty years. It is the same funny portrayal. In and out of town was alot of humor. It is the same funny, serious, actors. Remembering it all as such a to do. It is the same funny show.

Yes   |   No


Steve G.

I found this movie odd, too say the least. The first half was almost comedic. The last half was a serious look at the Indian perspective at Little Big Horn, when General George Custer and his ego, lost his last battle to the Indian people he slaughtered for years previous. I really enjoyed the last half of the movie, and a very young Dustin Hoffman - as he isn't seduced this time by "Mrs. Robinson", but instead, the three sisters of Sunshine. Like I said, an odd portrail of the events the led to the classic battle at Little Big Horn.

Yes   |   No


Lynn and Steve P.

I've owned this movie for many years and watched it over and over and I never tire of it. I love the many characters, story lines, and points of view. I especially love Chief Dan George (he's also great in The Outlaw Josey Wales). --steve p

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    Member Reviews
     
    Donna E.

    This is a movie I would have in my collection...and there are very very few I would actually own. I don't even particularly like westerns, but the story in this movie is so good! I've seen this movie many times because every so often I just have to watch it again...like a good book that you re-read every few years.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Kevin T.

    Though this certainly isn't a documentary, it does give us some insight into how the Native Americans were treated. Dustin Hoffman at his best. I love this movie. 5-STARS

    Yes   |   No

     
    William W.

    I was 18 when this movie came out im now 58.I just saw it again after all these years and it was just as good and sad just like i remembered.We the white man REALLY screwed the native Americans they were called human beings in Little Big Man and they were.The whites especially the soldiers were nothing more than a bunch of hired killers.Dustin Hoffman plays such a great role along with native grandfather Chief Dan George if you havent seen Little Big Man do so.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 35 Reviews