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''Broken Arrow'' is a 1950 Technicolor {{Western}} film, directed by Creator/DelmerDaves and starring Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a UsefulNotes/GoldenGlobeAward for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western film since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

The story is a fictionalized account of events involving Cochise and Tom Jeffords. Jeffords (Stewart) is responsible for mail delivery in the Arizona Territory in 1862. When Apache raiding parties shoot up some of his mail couriers, he rides alone to the camp of Cochise (Chandler) to parley for their safe passage. This act of bravery so impresses the chief that he becomes friend and blood brother to Jeffords. Their friendship is tested and relied upon in ending the decade-long Apache war.

The film was a success and inspired several similar Westerns through the '50s, including ''Devil's Doorway'' and ''Run of the Arrow''. It also led to a TV series of the same name, starring Creator/MichaelAnsara as Cochise.

to:

''Broken Arrow'' is a 1950 Technicolor {{Western}} film, directed by Creator/DelmerDaves and starring Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a UsefulNotes/GoldenGlobeAward for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western film since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans. \n\n\\\

The story is a fictionalized account of events involving Cochise and Tom Jeffords. Jeffords (Stewart) is responsible for mail delivery in the Arizona Territory in 1862. When Apache raiding parties shoot up some of his mail couriers, he rides alone to the camp of Cochise (Chandler) to parley for their safe passage. This act of bravery so impresses the chief that he becomes friend and blood brother to Jeffords. Their friendship is tested and relied upon in ending the decade-long Apache war.

war.\\\

The film was a success and inspired several similar Westerns through the '50s, including ''Devil's Doorway'' and ''Run of the Arrow''. It also led to a TV series of the same name, starring Creator/MichaelAnsara as Cochise. \n\\\
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Not to be confused with the [[Film/BrokenArrow1996 1996 John Woo film.]]

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Not to be confused with the [[Film/BrokenArrow1996 1996 John Woo film.]]
film]], although coincidentally enough both films were Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox releases.
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''Broken Arrow'' is a western Technicolor film released in 1950. It was directed by Creator/DelmerDaves and starred Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

The story is a fictionalized account of events involving are Cochise and Tom Jeffords. Jeffords is responsible for mail delivery in the Arizona Territory in 1862. When Apache raiding parties shoot up some of his mail couriers, he rides alone to the camp of Cochise to parley for their safe passage. This act of bravery so impresses the chief that he becomes friend and blood brother to Jeffords. Their friendship tested and relied on in ending the decade-long Apache war.

to:

''Broken Arrow'' is a western 1950 Technicolor film released in 1950. It was {{Western}} film, directed by Creator/DelmerDaves and starred starring Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award UsefulNotes/GoldenGlobeAward for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western film since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

The story is a fictionalized account of events involving are Cochise and Tom Jeffords. Jeffords (Stewart) is responsible for mail delivery in the Arizona Territory in 1862. When Apache raiding parties shoot up some of his mail couriers, he rides alone to the camp of Cochise (Chandler) to parley for their safe passage. This act of bravery so impresses the chief that he becomes friend and blood brother to Jeffords. Their friendship is tested and relied on upon in ending the decade-long Apache war.
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typo


* CharacterWitness: In the beginning, Leffords gives water and treats a young wounded Apache who was wandering in the desert. He does it at personal risk (for example lighting a fire is dangerous, but he does it to treat the Apache). When a Apache party catches Leffords, the young Indian intervenes to save the life of Leffords.

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* CharacterWitness: In the beginning, Leffords gives water and treats a young wounded Apache who was wandering in the desert. He does it at personal risk (for example lighting a fire is dangerous, but he does it to treat the Apache). When a an Apache party catches Leffords, the young Indian intervenes to save the life of Leffords.

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Cowboys And Indians is about kids playing


* CowboysAndIndians: A genuine deconstruction of the entire conflict and the mentality of simplistic good versus bad. It's pointed out that both sides have good and bad people, who have a laundry list of genuine grievances to justify their violent impulses.


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* TheSavageIndian: A genuine deconstruction of the entire conflict and the mentality of simplistic good versus bad. It's pointed out that both sides have good and bad people, who have a laundry list of genuine grievances to justify their violent impulses.
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Added DiffLines:

* CharacterWitness: In the beginning, Leffords gives water and treats a young wounded Apache who was wandering in the desert. He does it at personal risk (for example lighting a fire is dangerous, but he does it to treat the Apache). When a Apache party catches Leffords, the young Indian intervenes to save the life of Leffords.


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* TranslationConvention: The Apaches should speak in their own language, but in the film they speak English. [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in the opening narration, where Leffords explains that the film is true-to-life, except on this point.
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* IndianMaiden: Sonseeahray is a young Apache girl. Leffords falls in love with her at first sight. Her name means "the Morning Star".
* LoveAtFirstSight: Leffords and Sonseeahray fall for each other immediately the first time they meet.
* MalignedMixedMarriage: When Leffords says that he wants to marry Sonseeahray, Cochise tries to dissuade him: he tells that this couple will not be accepted in the Apache tribe, nor in Tucson, so they would have to leave.
* MurderTheHypotenuse: Nahilzay covets Sonseeahray, but she turns him down and falls in love with Leffords. Nahilzay tries to murder Leffords.
* TheNativeRival: Nahilzay gets jealous of Leffords because he coveted Sonseeahray, but she turned him down and fell in love with Leffords. So he decides to murder Leffords.
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! Tropes associated with this work:

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! Tropes associated with this work:!!''Broken Arrow'' provides examples of:



* WitchHunt: The crowd around Tucson barely tolerate Leffords and when they receive word of a brutal attack, they accuse him of being a spy for the Indians, and set about grabbing him to lynch him publicly before General Howard comes to his rescue. Incidentally, the screenwriter of this film is Albert Maltz, one of [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist the Hollywood Ten]] blacklisted by [=HUAC=] and who on the film's original release was uncredited, and wrote under a front. Since 1991, the original credit to Maltz has been restored.

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* WitchHunt: The crowd around Tucson barely tolerate Leffords and when they receive word of a brutal attack, they accuse him of being a spy for the Indians, and set about grabbing him to lynch him publicly before General Howard comes to his rescue. Incidentally, the screenwriter of this film is Albert Maltz, one of [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist the Hollywood Ten]] blacklisted by [=HUAC=] HUAC and who on the film's original release was uncredited, and wrote under a front. Since 1991, the original credit to Maltz has been restored.
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* WitchHunt: The crowd around Tucson barely tolerate Leffords and when they recieve word of a brutal attack, they accuse him of being a spy for the Indians, and set about grabbing him to lynch him publicly before General Howard comes to his rescue. Incidentally, the screenwriter of this film is Albert Maltz, one of [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist the Hollywood Ten]] blacklisted by [=HUAC=] and who on the film's original release was uncredited, and wrote under a front. Since 1991, the original credit to Maltz has been restored.

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* WitchHunt: The crowd around Tucson barely tolerate Leffords and when they recieve receive word of a brutal attack, they accuse him of being a spy for the Indians, and set about grabbing him to lynch him publicly before General Howard comes to his rescue. Incidentally, the screenwriter of this film is Albert Maltz, one of [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist the Hollywood Ten]] blacklisted by [=HUAC=] and who on the film's original release was uncredited, and wrote under a front. Since 1991, the original credit to Maltz has been restored.
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* TheCavalry: An inversion at the end, when a group of renegage Apache attacks the Butterfield Stagecoach, Tom goes to get the support of Cochise who come marching in and chasing the renegades away. One of the stagecoach drivers notes the inversion of Indians coming to rescue the white man.

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* TheCavalry: An inversion at the end, when a group of renegage renegade Apache attacks the Butterfield Stagecoach, Tom goes to get the support of Cochise who come marching in and chasing the renegades away. One of the stagecoach drivers notes the inversion of Indians coming to rescue the white man.

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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/broken_arrow_xlg.jpg]]



Tropes associated with this work:

* CowboysAndIndians
* MagicalNativeAmerican
* MightyWhitey: Mostly averted.
* NobleSavage: Played with. Cochise and Sonseeahray qualify, but Geronimo and his warriors are depicted as violent fanatics.

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! Tropes associated with this work:

work:
* CowboysAndIndians
ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: An inversion. There is relatively little action in the film, since the movie ''is'' about attempts at bringing peace in Arizona, so you have drama scenes punctuated by brief moments of action, and the biggest battle scene takes place at the end of the first third of the film.
* MagicalNativeAmerican
AsTheGoodBookSays: General Howard quotes from the Bible at one point and points out that there is no mention or support for racial intolerance in the good book.
* MightyWhitey: Mostly averted.
TheCavalry: An inversion at the end, when a group of renegage Apache attacks the Butterfield Stagecoach, Tom goes to get the support of Cochise who come marching in and chasing the renegades away. One of the stagecoach drivers notes the inversion of Indians coming to rescue the white man.
* CowboysAndIndians: A genuine deconstruction of the entire conflict and the mentality of simplistic good versus bad. It's pointed out that both sides have good and bad people, who have a laundry list of genuine grievances to justify their violent impulses.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Cochise and Tom Leffords, later we get a glimpse of the origin of Geronimo. Oliver Otis Howard is also a real-life Union General, who was indeed nicknamed the "Christian General".
* HistoricalHeroUpgrade:
** Cochise gets a rare one in this film, focusing on his later career as a peacable diplomat rather than his early years as a warrior.
** Even though he doesn't appear, UsefulNotes/UlyssesSGrant gets this too. The movie accurately reflects President Grant's genuinely progressive and honest attempts to make peace with native tribes and since at the time, Grant was written off as a "bad president", this counts (along with Daves' ''Drum Beat'') as one of the few movies that portrays his administration in a positive light.
* NeverMyFault: Leffords calls out a townsman who insists that the Apaches cannot be trusted and aren't human by reminding him that it was the settlers who first broke their word to Cochise by violating SacredHospitality.
* NobleSavage: Played with. The movie repeatedly emphasizes that both the settlers and the Apache tribes are people with the same mix of good, bad and gray among their people as among the settlers themselves.
* ProudWarriorRace: The Apaches have developed an identity around this, and
Cochise and Sonseeahray qualify, but Geronimo and his warriors are depicted as violent fanatics. is trying to tone down the warrior part at the very least. But others in the community want to continue defying the "white man".


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* ShownTheirWork: One of the few Hollywood westerns of its time (and afterwards) to actually put some effort in getting accuracy of period and setting. Notably it uses actual Apache extras to star as Apaches (apart from the leads who are played in the usual Hollywood Brownface style), which was quite rare for that period[[note]]Creator/JohnFord for instance shot his movies in Utah, and featured Navajo extras playing non-Navajo natives, with the exception of ''Wagon Master''[[/note]]. It also features depiction of actual Apache rituals and dresses. The story of Cochise's peace treaty also happened more or less as we see in the film with only small dramatizations.
* WitchHunt: The crowd around Tucson barely tolerate Leffords and when they recieve word of a brutal attack, they accuse him of being a spy for the Indians, and set about grabbing him to lynch him publicly before General Howard comes to his rescue. Incidentally, the screenwriter of this film is Albert Maltz, one of [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist the Hollywood Ten]] blacklisted by [=HUAC=] and who on the film's original release was uncredited, and wrote under a front. Since 1991, the original credit to Maltz has been restored.
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''Broken Arrow'' is a western Technicolor film released in 1950. It was directed by Delmer Daves and starred Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

to:

''Broken Arrow'' is a western Technicolor film released in 1950. It was directed by Delmer Daves Creator/DelmerDaves and starred Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.
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Added DiffLines:

The film was a success and inspired several similar Westerns through the '50s, including ''Devil's Doorway'' and ''Run of the Arrow''. It also led to a TV series of the same name, starring Creator/MichaelAnsara as Cochise.


Added DiffLines:

* NobleSavage: Played with. Cochise and Sonseeahray qualify, but Geronimo and his warriors are depicted as violent fanatics.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Cochise and General Howard.
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''Broken Arrow'' is a western Technicolor film released in 1950. It was directed by Delmer Daves and starred JamesStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

to:

''Broken Arrow'' is a western Technicolor film released in 1950. It was directed by Delmer Daves and starred JamesStewart Creator/JimmyStewart and Jeff Chandler. The film won a Golden Globe award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding, making history as the first major Western since the Second World War to side with the Native Americans.

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