Mohawk
An artist working in a remote army post is juggling the storekeeper's daughter, his fiancée newly arrived from the east, and the Indian Chief's daughter. But when a vengeful settler manages to get the army and the braves at each other's throats his troubles really begin.
Mohawk is a 1956 Pathécolor drama directed by Kurt Neumann, starring Scott Brady, Rita Gam and Neville Brand. The picture is about an 18th-century Boston artist sent to the Mohawk Valley to paint landscapes and portraits of Native Americans. The film reuses many sequences from the 1939 film Drums Along the Mohawk.
Plot
In 18th century upstate New York, a quarrelsome white man named Butler seeks to foment war with the Indians, to rid the Mohawk Valley of the natives and settlers he despises. He goes to the Iroquois chef Kowanen to warn him about a party of armed white settlers. Kowanen shows no concern, but his son Keoga and brave Rokhawah feel otherwise and plot a raid to steal the settlers’ muskets. They are assisted by Keoga’s sister Onida, but many Indians end up killed and Onida captured.
An artist, Jonathan Adams, has arrived from Boston, commissioned to do paintings and portraits. He is joined by sweetheart Cynthia Stanhope, a society lady from Boston, and attracted to Greta Jones, a local barmaid. But when he escorts Onida from the fort back to her people, he develops a romantic interest in her instead. Adams also earns the respect and trust of Kowanen as he paints the chief’s portrait and Keoga comes to admire Adams’ fighting prowess. Kowanen, seeking peace with the white settlers, offers to have his son Keoga accompany Adams back to the fort, as a sign of good faith.
As the two peace emissaries are en route to the fort, Butler stages an ambush, murdering Keoga. Chief Kowanen’s men hold the whites responsible and take Adams captive, but he escapes, aided by Onida. When Adams finally reaches the fort, he reveals Butler’s perfidy. As the enraged Indians attack, Butler is cast out of the besieged fort and meets his end in a hail of Indian arrows. A truce is declared, and while Cynthia goes back to Boston with his works of art, Adams remains behind to be with Onida.
Cast
Scott Brady as Jonathan Adams
Rita Gam as Onida
Neville Brand as Rokhawah
Lori Nelson as Cynthia Stanhope
Allison Hayes as Greta Jones
John Hoyt as Butler
Rhys Williams as Clem Jones
Barbara Jo Allen as Aunt Agatha (as Vera Vague)
Mae Clarke as Minikah
Tommy Cook as Keoga
Ted de Corsia as Indian Chief Kowanen
Michael Granger as Priest
John Hudson as Captain Langley
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