IMDb RATING
6.9/10
6.2K
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A Montana bounty hunter and an anthropologist discover a tribe of Native Americans living in a settlement isolated from the rest of the world.A Montana bounty hunter and an anthropologist discover a tribe of Native Americans living in a settlement isolated from the rest of the world.A Montana bounty hunter and an anthropologist discover a tribe of Native Americans living in a settlement isolated from the rest of the world.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe American theatrical and home video releases of this film included narration by Wilford Brimley (in third-person), which is absent from the UK version. DVD users can select "Director's Cut" in the DVD options, to watch the movie minus the narration.
- GoofsTo obtain penicillin, Gates robs a pharmacy and sets the law after him because the pharmacist will not sell him any without a prescription. But any horseman as experienced as he is would know that penicillin can be bought from any large-animal veterinarian.
- Quotes
Professor Lillian Stone: What happened was inevitable. The way it happened was unconscionable.
- Alternate versionsThere are now three versions of the film. One with the narration by Wilford Brimley. Then there is a version now running on cable movie channels with a guy talking as Louis Gates, that nobody knows who he is. And then there is a plain version without any narration at all.
Featured review
This is a great movie! I've got to say it again: This is a great movie! I've never liked cowboy or Indian pictures, but this movie realisticly sets up a fantastic but simple premise that there are Indians still living in the wilderness. Tom Berringer discovers them with the help of Barbera Hershey while the sheriff played by Kurtwood Smith is looking for him. Smith, by the way, is now probably best known as the no-nonsense father on "That 70s Show." I also have to mention the dog who seems to get a lot of his own scenes. The Indians superficially look authentic and believable as does their history which is so grounded and set up before hand that they could almost be real. The scenery is probably the biggest star as much of the locales and views are too breath-taking to be real. This movie would have had Academy Award written all over it had it been released theatrically. This movie just goes to prove that Hollywood big shots really don't know what they are doing.
- aesgaard41
- Jan 10, 2001
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $25,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $7,024,389
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,520,206
- Sep 10, 1995
- Gross worldwide
- $7,024,389
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