Bugles in the Afternoon

1952 "WHEN FLAMING ARROWS WERE THE SCOURGE OF THE DAKOTA TERRITORY!"
6| 1h25m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 04 March 1952 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Old enemies stationed together at an Army post vie for the same woman.

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Reviews

Colibel Terrible acting, screenplay and direction.
Stometer Save your money for something good and enjoyable
Libramedi Intense, gripping, stylish and poignant
Orla Zuniga It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review
MartinHafer When the film begins, you see Captain Shafter (Ray Milland) being thrown out of the Cavalry for attacking another officer. The exact circumstances are unknown.In the next scene, years have passed and Shafter is heading west on a stage coach. He is going to re-enlist in the Cavalry under an assumed name...and wouldn't you know it that the guy he attacked years ago (Hugh Marlow) is there and looking to get revenge on Shafter. All this, by the way, is set during the period in which Crazy Horse is on the rampage and heading to a showdown at the Little Big Horn.This is a very standard western and Milland is just fine. There is nothing particularly bad nor good about this one...a decent time passer with a satisfying finale.
alexandre michel liberman (tmwest) This film starts with Colonel Kern Shafter (Ray Milland) being dishonorably discharged, no doubt the best scene of the movie. And there lies the problem, to keep up the movie on the same level. Perhaps with John Ford and Victor McLaglen (Forrest Tucker as a good guy, come on!!), or Anthony Mann or Budd Boetticher, this might have been achieved, not an easy task. But still, this is a good western, built around Custer's last stand. Hugh Marlowe is Capt. Edward Garnett, Shafter's rival before the film starts and also his rival after, on account of two different women the latter (Josephine Russel) played by lovely Helena Carter. One might ask what motivation was behind Shafter placing himself under the command of Garnett after having stabbed him in the past, but the film does not elaborate on that. On the other hand, very good action, and cavalry scenes, and great scenery. Just lower your expectations after the beginning and you are on to a good entertainment.
greenheart An interesting variation on the story of Custer's last stand. It deals with the same battle with the Sioux, but at a site a few miles away from where Custer and his men were massacred. This premise is a nice angle to focus on although I'm not sure that any part of this has any historical battle. The scenery is breathtaking and we were treated to arrows in the back, Indians flying off horses, hand to hand combat and fisticuffs between soldiers. Ray Milland looks alarmingly like John Wayne, but I enjoyed his performance. Too much of the movie concentrates on a love triangle between Milland, his boss and seemingly the only female in the whole area. Quite frankly, both men needed their heads banging together and told to get on with the job in hand. But where would the drama be in that? Despite this whole feud becoming a little tiresome, this was an interesting piece and is well worth a view.
Marlburian The book "Bugles in the Afternoon" is regarded as one of the better novels relating to Custer's Last Stand, and this film is a reasonable adaptation, not that it devotes much time to the battle itself. Rather it concentrates on a love triangle, with some good cavalry action with the Indians that is almost incidental to the Custer massacre.I blinked a little at Kern Shafter's appearance on arriving to enlist at Fort Abraham Lincoln; he looked extremely smart, even for the gambler he had become. I assume his motivation in rejoining the colours was nostalgia for army life,though this wasn't completely evident.The well-known participants in the battle - Custer, Reno, Benteen - don't get much screen time, and the General himself has only a few lines. At least he looks the part, with the short hair he favoured for a hot campaign rather than his trademark long locks. Purists may raise their eyebrows at the cavalry using repeating rifles, when in fact they carried single-shot carbines, and pack-animals rather than the wagons shown supplied the troops in the general battlefield area.But all in all, it's a reasonable cavalry Western, but not in the same league as those of John Wayne and John Ford.