The Last Of The Mohicans - Movie Review

  • 01 November 2005

Rating: 2.5 out of 5

James Fenimore Cooper and Michael Mann together? The Last of the Mohicans represents an unlikely collaboration that didn't seem all that great to me back in 1992, and now, in it's release as a "Director's Expanded Edition," still doesn't seem all that great, nor that expanded. The story of warring English and French in 1750s colonial America, and the culture clash that comes along with that, really isn't quite as timeless as people would like to think. Not to mention, Day-Lewis and Stowe's romance isn't very believable. Still too bland for my tastes.

Image caption The Last of the Mohicans

Facts and Figures

Year: 1992

In Theaters: Friday 25th September 1992

Box Office Worldwide: $75.5M

Budget: $40M

Distributed by: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment

Production compaines: 20th Century Fox

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 2.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Fresh: 34 Rotten: 2

IMDB: 7.8 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Michael Mann

Producer: Hunt Lowry, Michael Mann

Screenwriter: Christopher Crowe, Michael Mann

Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis as Hawkeye/Nathaniel Poe, Madeleine Stowe as Cora Munro, Russell Means as Chingachgook, Eric Schweig as Uncas, Jodhi May as Alice Munro, Steven Waddington as Major Heyward, Wes Studi as Magua, Maurice Roeves as Col. Edmund Munro, Patrice Chéreau as Gen Montcalm, Edward Blatchford as Jack Winthrop, Terry Kinney as John Cameron, Tracey Ellis as Alexandra Cameron, Justin M. Rice as James Cameron, Dennis Banks as Ongewasgone, Pete Postlethwaite as Capt. Beams

Also starring: Daniel Day Lewis, Hunt Lowry, Michael Mann, Christopher Crowe