The Last of the Mohicans (1992) — Read Along

Stephen Blackford
4 min readMay 18, 2024

A Michael Mann Masterpiece

“The Last of the Mohicans” (1992) Directed by Michael Mann. Picture courtesy of and with thanks to www.fanfare.pub

Welcome back to Read Along “Top of the Pops” and coming in at number 4 on my Youtube channel film chart is “The Last of the Mohicans” directed by Michael Mann with a whopping 110 views!

Care to make it a more numerically pleasing 111?

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“1757: The American Colonies. It is the 3rd year of the war between England and France for the possession of the continent.

Three men, the last of a vanishing people, are on the frontier west of the Hudson River”

Cue “Hawkeye” (an astonishing Daniel Day-Lewis) running through a dense forest to the backdrop of the film’s brilliant main and iconic musical theme “The Gael” by Dougie MacLean. The film’s music is its heartbeat with the above main theme often used throughout, as well as Clannad’s “I will find you”, however the overall musical score from Trevor Jones and Randy Edelman is a treat and highly recommended. Based on the original novel by James Fenimore Cooper and inspired by previous film adaptations, this screenplay was also written by Michael Mann and Christopher Crowe. From a frenetic beginning to a sweet and jovial familial gathering, the back story is quickly established:

Hawkeye, together with Brother “Uncas” (Eric Schweig) and spiritual Father “Chingachgook” (Russell Means) patrol the surrounding hills where they live in relative harmony despite being situated at the very tip of the frontier and the ongoing war. With the war growing closer to home, they rescue an English army despatch on their way to Fort William Henry. Within this despatch is “Major Duncan Heyward” (Steve Waddington) and two of the Colonel’s daughters, one of which is “Cora Munro” (Madeleine Stowe). Madeleine Stowe is simply excellent as Cora, and the shared scenes with Day-Lewis’ Hawkeye are superbly played by both, culminating in the waterfall scene above. The Uncas character is a little under used, however the same can’t be said for Russell Means’ character Chingachgook. Means is superb throughout and the film’s moral centre, but an acting performance of great class too. Wes Studi is excellent as “Magua”, the villian of the piece and small cameo’s are well played by Pete Postlethwaite as “Captain Beams”, Jodhi May as “Alice Munro” and Maurice Roeves as “Edward Munro”.

Acting credits of course belong to Daniel Day-Lewis.

With the camera seemingly never off him, Day-Lewis is utterly captivating and he also brings out the very best in the actors that surround him. Yet another power house performance and another to add to his CV of film stealing brilliance.

Throughout this joy of a film it’s clear that Mann and regular Director of Photography Dante Spinotti have again meticulously planned every scene down to the last detail. It really is a triumph for both, as with the aforementioned brilliant musical score, every scene is perfectly blended together, moving the two hour epic along at a good pace, despite Mann’s trademark of wringing every last ounce out of a scene before moving on. Again, the scenes are unrushed and backed by Spinotti’s lighting and beautiful wide shots, it’s still a joy to watch 30 years since release. The film hasn’t aged, is still as affecting as ever and has so many iconic scenes created by the Mann/Spinotti partnership. From an opening short scene of the English army advancing on the village, across a bridge and amidst simple yet effective reflections, to a brutal and violent ambush brilliantly choreographed and with a constantly moving camera/Steadicam and quick flash editing, to another ambush and similar praise throughout.

The final credits fall (pun intended) to two waterfall sequences, one short scene during a climb alongside a waterfall, to the iconic scene inside a waterfall. Mann, Spinotti, Day-Lewis and Stowe all triumph here, as does the accompanying musical score and Costume Design from Elsa Zamparelli. Yet another Michael Mann masterpiece was guaranteed.

“Chingachgook” (Russell Means) Also deserves great credit for his portrayal here and for his other wonderful acting credits throughout his career. I consider myself very fortunate to have listened to many interviews with Russell as he was forthright and not backward in coming forward as a Libertarian political activist and strong activist for the rights of the Native American People.

Born: 10th November 1939
Died: 22nd October 2012

(1) My pride and joy. All available via Amazon (Author’s Collection)
(2) My pride and joy. All available via Amazon (Author’s Collection)

Thanks for reading. I hope this message in a bottle in The Matrix finds you well, prospering, and the right way up in an upside down world.

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Stephen Blackford

Father, Son and occasional Holy Goat too. https://linktr.ee/theblackfordbookclub I always reciprocate the kindness of a follow.