VHS
60 minutes
E83.876 .L351 1992
The Battle of the Little Big Horn, known as "Custer's Last Stand," has been one of the most frequently depicted moments in American history - and one of the least understood, still shrouded in myth.
The battle has inspired over 1,000 different paintings and works of art, calendar displays, comic books and cereal boxes. The golden-haired general and his doomed 7th Cavalry have been wiped out by Indians in more than 40 films. Yet the battle that left no white survivors also left two very different accounts of Little Big Horn: one white; one Indian. Using journals, oral accounts and Indian ledger drawings as well as archival and feature films, a Native American novelist and a white filmmaker combine talents to examine this watershed moment in history from two views: from that of the Sioux, Cheyenne and Crow who had lived on the Great Plains for generations; and from that of the white settlers who pushed west across the continent. Pulitzer Prize-winning Native American writer Scott Momaday narrates.
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