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Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson Poster

Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson

The greatest buffaloer of them all!
1976 | 123m | English

(5713 votes)

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Popularity: 0.5 (history)

Details

Buffalo Bill plans to put on his own Wild West sideshow, and Chief Sitting Bull has agreed to appear in it. However, Sitting Bull has his own hidden agenda, involving the President and General Custer.
Release Date: Jun 24, 1976
Director: Robert Altman
Writer: Robert Altman, Alan Rudolph
Genres: Comedy, Western
Keywords based on play or musical, annie oakley, wild west, wild west show, buffalo bill, 19th century, revisionist western
Production Companies United Artists, David Susskind Productions, The De Laurentiis Company, Lion's Gate Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Paul Newman The Star (William F. Cody)
Joel Grey The Producer (Nate Salisbury)
Kevin McCarthy The Publicist (Maj. John Burke)
Harvey Keitel The Relative (Ed Goodman)
Allan F. Nicholls The Journalist (Prentiss Ingraham)
Geraldine Chaplin The Sure Shot (Annie Oakley)
John Considine The Sure Shot's Manager (Frank Butler)
Robert DoQui The Wrangler (Oswald Dart)
Mike Kaplan The Treasurer (Jules Keen)
Bert Remsen The Bartender (Crutch)
Bonnie Leaders The Mezzo-Contralto (Margaret)
Noelle Rogers The Lyric-Coloratura (Lucille DuCharme)
Evelyn Lear The Lyric-Soprano (Nina Cavallini)
Denver Pyle The Indian Agent (McLaughlin)
Frank Kaquitts The Indian (Sitting Bull)
Will Sampson The Interpreter (William Halsey)
Ken Krossa The Arenic Director (Johnny Baker)
Fred N. Larsen The King of the Cowboys (Buck Taylor)
Jerri Duce Trick Rider
Joy Duce Trick Rider
Alex Green Whip & Fast Draw Act
Gary MacKenzie Whip & Fast Draw Act
Humphrey Gratz Old Soldier
Pat McCormick The President of the United States (Grover Cleveland)
Shelley Duvall The First Lady (Mrs. Cleveland)
Burt Lancaster The Legend Maker (Ned Buntline)
E. L. Doctorow President Cleveland's Adviser (uncredited)
Patrick Reynolds President Cleveland's Aide (uncredited)
Name Job
Robert Altman Director, Screenstory, Screenplay
Richard Baskin Original Music Composer
Paul Lohmann Director of Photography
Peter Appleton Editor
Dennis M. Hill Editor
Jack Maxsted Art Direction
Monty Westmore Makeup Artist
Michael Galloway Sound Recordist
Chris McLaughlin Sound Designer
Richard Oswald Sound Editor
Richard Portman Sound Re-Recording Mixer
William A. Sawyer Sound Editor
James E. Webb Sound Designer
Rob Young Sound Designer
Dan Perri Title Designer
Anthony Masters Production Design
Anthony Powell Costume Design
Arthur Kopit Theatre Play
Alan Rudolph Screenplay
Name Title
Robert Altman Producer
Jac Cashin Associate Producer
Dino De Laurentiis Executive Producer
David Susskind Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Cannes Film Festival Best Actor Paul Newman Nominated
Venice Film Festival Best Actor Paul Newman Nominated
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Reviews

Wuchak
3.0

_**Tedious arty Western; thoroughly UNentertaining**_ Released in 1976 and directed by Robert Altman, "Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson" stars Paul Newman as Buffalo Bill Cody, the star of his famous "Wild West Show" in the shadow of the Rockies in 1885. After Chief ... Sitting Bull of Little Big Horn fame (Frank Kaquitts) arrives with his Number One (Will Sampson), Cody is irked that the chief isn't a slaughtering savage, but is silently heroic and honorable. Cody fires him, but relents when star attraction Annie Oakley (Geraldine Chaplin) sympathizes with Sitting Bull. Then President Grover Cleveland (Pat McCormick ) visits with his entourage. This is revisionist Western, a "message movie" that Altman uses to criticize popular ideas or myths about the Old West. The titular hero is merely a showbiz creation who can no longer differentiate the truth from his made-up image. He's a blustering fool who asserts to be one with the Wild West, but lives in extravagance, play-acting in his Western circus. His hair is fake, he can no longer shoot straight or track a Native; and all his theatrical duels with owlhoots and Indians are fixed in his favor. The theme is interesting and the ensemble cast is great (which also includes Burt Lancaster, Kevin McCarthy, Harvey Keitel, John Considine, Noelle Rogers, Shelley Duvall and Denver Pyle, amongst other notables). It should've worked, but it didn't. It's somewhat akin to "Little Big Man" (1970) but less of a comedy and nowhere near as entertaining (not that I'm a big fan of that movie or anything, but at least it has its entertaining moments). While the Wild West circus elicits some entertaining moments (e.g. rodeo stunts) they can't save the flick from being an arty, pretentious, tiresome bomb. Moreover, the principle Native Americans are ironically so one-dimensional and wooden I thought maybe Altman was making a snide aside about "wooden Indians." Lastly, the ideology is blatantly one-sided against the New Americans, depicting Not-as-New Americans as super-noble while conveniently ignoring their documented dark side, e.g. the heinous torture tactics most tribes inflicted on their captive enemies, including other tribes-people, so as to hinder their condition in the afterlife (the "happy hunting grounds" or whatever). For instance, they'd gouge out enemies' eyes or mutilate their genitals so they (supposedly) wouldn't be able to see or copulate in the after-world. Yup, that's just so virtuous (sarcasm). Actually, I could handle this lopsided perspective if the movie itself were entertaining, but that's hardly the case. The film runs 123 minutes and was shot in Alberta, Canada, mostly at Stoney Indian Reserve. GRADE: D

Sep 20, 2021