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1 - A very American fable: the making of a Mohicans adaptation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2009

Martin Barker
Affiliation:
University of Wales, Aberystwyth
Roger Sabin
Affiliation:
University of the Arts, London
R. Barton Palmer
Affiliation:
Clemson University, South Carolina
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Summary

In 1936 the second major screen version of James Fenimore Cooper's (1789–1851) The Last of the Mohicans was released by a small outfit, Reliance Pictures, through United Artists. The film did very well at the box offices, and made a star of its lead male, Randolph Scott. Curiously absent from histories of 1930s Hollywood cinema, it has been fondly remembered by many viewers, and still plays on television quite regularly. It also provided the basis for Michael Mann's 1992 remake; Mann credits the screenplay by Philip Dunne as a prime source for his own ideas. In 1997 we published a book about the long and extensive history of adaptations of Mohicans, across the media of film, television, animation, and comic books. We tried to set the 1936 film in its production and cultural contexts. And in one important respect we got it wrong. This essay recounts what we discovered when an opportunity came subsequently to do further research in the archives. A very telling story emerges, which has implications far beyond this particular film.

Cooper's novel was originally published in 1826. More than any other, it made his name as an “American author.” Not the first, it was undoubtedly the best-known of his “Leatherstocking” tales which tell the life of Nathaniel Bumppo, or Hawkeye, the frontiersman who fictionally patrolled the forests of the North East – and who encountered the real circumstances of the French and English wars for control of America.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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