-
Get in there, Luke. Get in there. That's it.
-
Giddyap, now. Come on.
-
- Driver?
- Get in there, Rosie.
-
Driver, how much farther
to this Hasenpfeffer...
-
...or whatever you call
the confounded place?
-
Hassayampa? Oh, shouldn't be long now.
-
Once over the rise, and round the bend,
then along a piece.
-
We should've been there an hour ago.
-
Don't suppose we could've passed her,
do you, Fink?
-
Might have, at that.
-
Don't you worry, soldier boy.
We'll get you there.
-
"Soldier boy."
-
What a country.
Forty miles from mudhole to mudhole.
-
Mule Creek, Deadman's Squaw,
Schmidt's Wells.
-
Hangman's Flats, Hassayampa.
-
At the end of the rainbow, Fort Apache.
-
Fort Apache.
-
Blast an ungrateful War Department
that sends a man to a post out here.
-
Anyway, I'll be with you.
-
I hated all those years
you were in Europe.
-
Better there than here.
-
I didn't mean it that way, Phil.
-
It's just that after all I've done and been,
to be shunted aside like this...
-
We're coming in.
Practically on schedule. Right, Fink?
-
Practically.
-
- Ma Macbean?
- Aye. I'm coming.
-
- Nice trip, boys?
- Smooth as a rock.
-
How far is it to Fort Apache?
-
Oh, the fort's 35 miles south of here.
Were you expected?
-
- I telegraphed.
- Oh, that.
-
Telegraphs doesn't mean a thing.
-
One day the wire's up,
the next day they're down.
-
Thirty-five miles south?
Madam, is there a livery stable here?
-
No.
-
There must be some way
to rent a vehicle.
-
- A what?
- A rig. Any kind of rig.
-
Nothing fit for the lassie to ride in.
-
Oh, my, that's a real bonny bonnet, miss.
-
- St. Louis?
- Boston.
-
- Oh, Boston, Massachusetts?
- Here.
-
Oh, my.
-
Oh.
-
That's mighty pretty, Ma.
-
Oh, my.
-
Oh, would you not like a wee cup of tea
and get rid of the dust?
-
Thank you.
If it isn't too much trouble.
-
Not a bit, lass, not a bit.
Come on. Right in here.
-
Son, how about a drink?
-
Gentlemen, I could use one.
-
Women.
-
There's your towel.
You'll be as fresh as a daisy.
-
Thanks, Ma.
-
Oh, I'm sorry, ma'am. I thought it was Ma.
I beg your pardon, miss.
-
Who and what are you, mister?
-
Lieutenant Michael O'Rourke, sir.
En route for duty at Fort Apache, sir.
-
- Get into uniform, mister.
- Yes, sir.
-
- Is there another wash-up back here?
- Through the lean-to, sir.
-
Soldiers.
-
- Hey!
- Hey, come on inside.
-
Johnny Reb. Uncle Festie.
-
Timmy. Uncle Dan.
-
Gentlemen, gentlemen. Your manners.
-
Ho!
-
Sergeant Mulcahy,
with ambulance and escort...
-
...for Lieutenant Michael O'Rourke.
-
Very good, sergeant. At ease.
-
"At ease," he says. Ha-ha-ha. "At ease."
-
Hey! Hey!
-
Hey! Hey!
-
- How much you pay for it?
- Seventy-five dollars.
-
- I could've swiped you one better than that.
- It's tailor-made.
-
Well, look at the fit. A perfect soldier.
-
What do you think of it, ma'am?
-
Wonderful.
-
Ma'am, this is my godson,
Lieutenant O'Rourke.
-
Many's the time he's come to me
with a wet nose.
-
Attention!
-
I am Colonel Thursday.
I presume you have been sent for me.
-
- No, sir.
- What are you doing here?
-
Escorting the ambulance from Fort Apache
for Lieutenant O'Rourke, sir.
-
- Have you had no orders regarding me?
- No, sir.
-
They couldn't have known
of your arrival, sir.
-
That's obvious, mister.
-
Unless it's the custom at Fort Apache...
-
...to provide transportation
for incoming second lieutenants...
-
...and leave a commanding officer
to travel shanks' mare.
-
You will, of course, sir,
accept my ambulance.
-
Thank you, mister.
-
- Sergeant, we'll leave in one half-hour.
- Yes, sir.
-
Get these men a drink
and put it on my account.
-
- We thank the colonel.
- We thank the colonel, sir.
-
Oh, may I present Mr. O'Brien.
-
O'Rourke, sir.
-
O'Rourke. This is my daughter,
Miss Philadelphia.
-
How do you do?
-
Your servant, ma'am.
-
Four bottles of cool beer, Ma.
-
And I'll have the same
with a whiskey chaser.
-
Halt. Who goes there?
-
The new commanding officer.
-
Holy Moses.
-
No, the new commanding officer.
-
Attention!
-
At your ease, gentlemen.
-
- Thursday.
- Hello, Collingwood.
-
How do you do, Mrs. Collingwood?
-
Well, thank you, Owen.
-
And this must be Philadelphia.
-
You don't remember me, do you?
-
Emily Collingwood.
Your mother was my dearest friend.
-
Why, of course.
Oh, I've heard so much about you.
-
- We didn't expect you.
- So I see.
-
Captain York.
-
I'm Captain York, sir.
I bid you welcome, General Thursday.
-
I'm not a general, captain.
A man is what he's paid for.
-
I'm paid in the rank
of lieutenant colonel.
-
I remember you as a general
from the war, sir.
-
Very flattering. Didn't you receive
my telegraph, captain?
-
The wires have been down between here
and Fort Grant for two days.
-
We've had no communications.
-
Two days? The break
should have been repaired.
-
It's 110 miles to Fort Grant, sir.
-
I take it this dance is not in my honor.
-
- It's a birthday dance, sir.
- Birthday? Whose birthday?
-
General George Washington's, sir.
-
Shall I show you to your quarters,
or will you remain?
-
Well, under the circumstances, I--
-
Miss Thursday?
-
Hi, Dad.
-
Mickey.
-
Woman of the house, your son is home.
-
- Son.
- Hi, Ma.
-
Oh, how fine you look.
But you're so tall.
-
Oh, Michael, stand over beside the boy
so I can see.
-
Oh, you're just exactly the same.
-
Now come over here and sit down
and tell me everything.
-
Gee, Ma, you haven't changed a bit.
Nothing has.
-
And why would it?
Four years is not so long.
-
Or did you think to find me
grown gray completely?
-
Woman, I'll leave you alone
with your son.
-
Lieutenant Michael O'Rourke, sir.
-
Have I the lieutenant's permission
to leave, sir?
-
Sergeant Major O'Rourke has permission.
-
Thank you, sir.
-
- Michael.
- God's blessing on you this day.
-
Boys, I'm not a drinking man,
as you know, but there are times.
-
And tonight, if the sutler's store
is still open--
-
Michael, darling, if it ain't,
I'll kick the door down with my bare fists.
-
Dad?
-
Dad?
-
Good morning.
-
It's all right.
-
There's no one here but me,
and I've been up for simply ages.
-
Oh?
-
Did you want to see Father or me?
-
Well, neither, really.
-
Oh.
-
I just called to leave my card.
-
Oh, how nice.
-
But if you didn't wanna see me...
-
I mean, if you don't wanna see us...
-
...then what do you wanna leave
your card for?
-
- I didn't say I didn't wanna see you.
- Why, you did so.
-
I asked if you wanted
to see Father or me...
-
...and you said, your exact words,
"Well, neither, really."
-
Well, what I meant to say was
I didn't expect to see either of you.
-
Well, who did you expect to see?
-
After all, we do live here.
-
Why don't you sit down?
-
Good morning, good morning,
fair dancing partner.
-
- Good morning, sir.
- Relax, Mickey.
-
Got some bad news for you.
You've been assigned to my troop.
-
"Michael Shannon O'Rourke,
lieutenant, United States Army."
-
Leaving your calling cards already,
Mickey, eh?
-
He can keep his old cards.
-
Oh, he can't do that. Protocol requires it.
-
An officer, upon reporting
to a new post...
-
...must wait upon his commanding officer
at the first possible moment.
-
He will leave his card.
-
He will leave an additional card for each
lady in the commanding officer's family.
-
All other officers on the post...
-
...will leave their cards at the quarters
of the incoming officer, right?
-
Right. Now do you understand?
-
- It was just a duty call?
- That's it. Just a duty call.
-
But there's nothing in the regulations
that says an officer's daughter...
-
...should receive such cards
on her back porch in her nightie.
-
Pish-tush. This is not a nightie.
It's a dressing gown, isn't it?
-
- I wouldn't know.
- And I haven't received any cards, anyway.
-
Well, hand them over to her, Mickey.
-
Oh, I get it, Miss Thursday.
-
The lieutenant expected someone
to meet him at the door with a silver salver.
-
- A what?
- A silver salver.
-
He'd drop the cards in that
and hurry away.
-
You don't happen to have
a silver salver, do you?
-
A silver salver?
Our things haven't even arrived.
-
Why, last night,
I slept on a horse blanket.
-
Attention!
-
Sergeant Major O'Rourke, sir.
-
At ease.
-
- Did you say "O'Rourke"?
- Yes, sir.
-
Place seems to be full of O'Rourkes.
-
Have the trumpeter sound
officer's call.
-
- Officer's call?
- How long have you been in the Army?
-
In the United States Army,
15 years, sir.
-
Then you've heard of officer's call.
Have it sounded.
-
Yes, sir.
-
- Derice, sound officer's call.
- Now?
-
No, next Christmas, you loony.
How long you been in the Army?
-
Then you've heard of officer's call.
Sound it.
-
"War Department, Washington, D.C.
Special orders number 687.
-
One. Lieutenant Colonel Owen Thursday
is hereby relieved of his present duties...
-
...and will proceed to Fort Apache...
-
...and upon arrival will assume command
of that post. Travel directed--"
-
And so forth.
-
"By direction of the secretary of war,
William B. Stafford."
-
In compliance with these orders,
I take command of the regiment...
-
...relieving Captain Kirby York,
who has returned to his troop.
-
Captain Collingwood is relieved of
the duties of regimental adjutant.
-
Returned to his troop.
-
Lieutenant Gates is appointed adjutant.
-
At ease, gentlemen.
-
Gentlemen, I did not seek this command,
but since it's been assigned me...
-
...I intend to make this regiment
the finest on the frontier.
-
I fully realize that prolonged duty
in a small outpost...
-
...can lead to carelessness...
-
...and inefficiency,
and laxity in dress and deportment.
-
I call it to your attention
that only one of you...
-
...has reported here this morning
properly dressed.
-
The uniform, gentlemen, is not a subject
for individual whimsical expression.
-
We're not cowboys at this post...
-
...nor freighters with a load of alfalfa.
-
Mr...
-
...Murphy.
-
O'Rourke, sir.
-
Mr. O'Rourke, will you step forward?
-
Gentlemen, I call your attention
to Mr. O'Rourke's dress.
-
Being fresh from West Point...
-
...Mr. O'Rourke has not forgotten
Army regulations.
-
I trust my other officers will
remember them in the future.
-
And I will insist they be enforced
throughout the command.
-
Understand me, gentlemen,
I am not a martinet.
-
But I do want to take pride
in my command.
-
We here have little chance for glory
or advancement.
-
While some of our brother officers
are leading...
-
...their well-publicized campaigns against
the great Indian nations...
-
...the Sioux and the Cheyenne...
-
...we are asked to ward off
the gnat stings and flea bites...
-
...of a few cowardly Digger Indians.
-
Your pardon, colonel. You'd hardly
call Apaches "Digger Indians," sir.
-
You'd scarcely compare them
with the Sioux, captain.
-
No, I don't.
-
The Sioux once raided
into Apache territory.
-
Old-timers told me you could follow
their line of retreat...
-
...by the bones of their dead.
-
I suggest the Apache
has deteriorated since then...
-
...judging by a few of the specimens
I've seen on my way out here.
-
Well, if you saw them, sir,
they weren't Apaches.
-
We'll discuss the Apache
some other time, captain.
-
The immediate point, gentlemen,
is that I hope to know you all better.
-
If we don't understand
each other now, we soon will.
-
Questions?
-
Good morning, gentlemen. You may return
to your breakfasts or your other duties.
-
Captain Collingwood, will you remain?
-
Go on.
-
Gentlemen, are there any questions?
-
If there are none, I intend
to follow orders and have breakfast.
-
Good morning, gentlemen.
-
Report to your coop.
-
Sir.
-
Nothing personal in this, Sam.
-
No explanations, Owen.
We've never had them before.
-
- Although, once, I tried.
- There was nothing to explain.
-
No, nothing.
-
You did what you did. Rode to glory.
-
I did what I did.
Wound up at Fort Apache.
-
- Well, you've wound up here too.
- Oh, by thunder.
-
I've not wound up. Not by a jugful.
-
They've pushed me aside,
sent me up to this tenpenny post.
-
But they'll not keep me buried.
I'll find something.
-
This isn't a country for glory, Owen.
-
I'll take my risks. I always have.
-
Well, then all I can do is
wish you good luck.
-
And I wish you that sincerely.
-
Thank you, Sam.
-
Will you have a drink?
-
No, thanks, Owen.
It's a little early in the day.
-
Even for me.
-
Anything new about my transfer?
-
- Sorry, sir, nothing yet.
- Thank you.
-
- O'Rourke.
- Yes, sir?
-
I require a mount. Have two or three
brought over for my selection.
-
- Yes, sir.
- O'Rourke.
-
Sir?
-
This Lieutenant O'Rourke,
are you, by chance, related?
-
Not by chance, sir. By blood.
He's my son.
-
I see.
-
How did he happen
to get into West Point?
-
It happened by presidential
appointment, sir.
-
Are you a former officer, O'Rourke?
-
During the war, I was a major
in the 69th New York Regiment.
-
The Irish Brigade, sir.
-
Still, it's been my impression that
presidential appointments...
-
...were restricted to sons
of holders of the Medal of Honor.
-
That is my impression too, sir.
Will that be all, sir?
-
Yes, sergeant. It will.
-
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
-
- Good morning.
- Good morning, ma'am.
-
- Good morning.
- Good morning, ma'am.
-
- Good morning.
- Good morning.
-
Excuse me. Could you tell me
where Mrs. Collingwood lives?
-
- Oh, right in there, dear.
- Thank you.
-
- Good morning.
- Philadelphia. Philly.
-
I was just--
I know it's terribly early to call, but--
-
Nonsense. Come in, dear.
I'm so glad to see you.
-
I was just passing and...
-
My, what a beautiful sideboard.
-
And those candlesticks.
-
They were my Aunt Martha's.
-
I was her favorite niece,
so when she died...
-
...she left her fortune
to a home for stray cats...
-
...and the candlesticks to me.
-
They're lovely.
-
Everything is.
-
But our place, it's so bare and so dirty.
-
- Oh, you poor child.
- And there's no water.
-
-Mrs. Collingwood--
- "Aunt Emily."
-
Aunt Emily, what does a woman
do in the Army?
-
Our things haven't--
We haven't even got a coffeepot.
-
- Do I get someone to help me or--?
- Owen. Owen Thursday. That man.
-
Now, don't you fret, dear.
-
In times of trouble,
we call on Mrs. O'Rourke.
-
- Mrs. O'Rourke?
- Mrs. O'Rourke.
-
Martha, where's Mrs. O'Rourke?
-
- Mrs. O'Rourke.
- Mrs. O'Rourke.
-
- Mrs. O'Rourke!
- Oh, yes, what is it?
-
- Mrs. O'Rourke.
- Oh, yes, Mrs. Collingwood?
-
Yes, Mrs. Collingwood? Yes?
-
Mary, this is Colonel Thursday's
daughter...
-
...and this is Mrs. O'Rourke,
the wife of our sergeant major...
-
...and the mother
of a very fine young officer.
-
How do you do, Mrs. O'Rourke?
-
Sam told me about Michael's arrival.
How happy you must be.
-
Oh, I am.
-
- How does he look?
- Oh, he looks wonderful.
-
I mean, he makes a very fine officer.
-
Mary, this poor child has to set up house
in that bare barn.
-
Don't you worry,
I'll tend to everything.
-
Well, he is nice.
-
Order. And one, two, three.
-
All right, now let's try it together.
-
Carry arm. One, two, three.
-
Put that piece on the ground.
-
Pick it up!
-
Put that piece down, soldier.
-
Captain, when you say "carry arm,"
you mean to carry this little gun?
-
- Get back in line!
- Yes, sir. I was only asking.
-
- Shut up and put your hat on!
- Yes, sir.
-
I'm sorry, soldier.
I was only trying to tell you.
-
- How's the boy doing, Festus?
- Oh, he's doing fine, Michael.
-
But nevertheless,
he's an officer and a gentleman.
-
And that's no job for a gentleman.
-
Well, then...
-
Come on.
-
Would Lieutenant O'Rourke
please step over to the stable, sir?
-
But these men, they're pretty rough.
-
Ah, but the sergeants-- The sergeants
can take over the drill, sir.
-
Very well.
-
- Sergeants, continue with the drill.
- Yes, sir.
-
Now, the first thing to do after becoming
a soldier is to look like a soldier.
-
To look like a soldier,
you got to stand like a soldier.
-
Suck in that belly.
Get that hand out of your pocket.
-
Straighten up those legs.
Pull those feet out. Get that chin up.
-
Wait a minute, Daniel, darling.
Just one moment.
-
I'm gonna make this squad the finest party
of men in the American Army.
-
Get back in line there.
-
Hold your head up.
Head and eyes straight to the front.
-
Heels together and your toes apart.
-
At the approximate angle of 45 degrees.
-
I've never seen such a ragged line.
Just come out and look at yourselves.
-
- Get back there.
- Get back there.
-
Now, is there any man here
from Tipperary?
-
Is there any man here from Cork?
-
Is there any man here
from County Sligo?
-
Yes, sir.
-
Now, we don't wanna show
any favoritism about this...
-
...but you're now an acting corporal.
-
Now, ahem, Sergeant Shattuck will take you
in the manual of arms.
-
That is, by numbers. Meaning one, two--
-
Come on, get back in line there.
-
Get on your feet. Get in here.
-
Hello, son.
-
It's from your mother and myself.
-
Oh, gee, Dad, he's a beauty.
-
He's thoroughbred and Morgan.
Get on him, ride him.
-
Come on.
-
Hey, Dad, he's a beauty.
-
He's a leaper, that one.
Go on, take him.
-
--four. One, two, three, four.
-
One, two, three, four.
-
One, two, three, four.
-
One, two.
-
There's Sergeant John McAfferty
-
And Corporal Donahue
-
They make us march up to the crack
In gallant Company Q
-
The drums they roll, upon my soul
For that's the way we go
-
Forty miles a day on beans and hay
In the Regular Army, oh
-
There's Sergeant John McAfferty
And Corporal Donahue
-
They make us march up to the crack
In gallant Company Q
-
The drums they roll, upon my soul
For that's the way we go
-
Forty miles a day on beans and hay
In the Regular Army, oh
-
- Those recruits, captain?
- Yes, sir. First day's drill.
-
They show promise.
-
A good officer, that O'Rourke.
-
West Point training, colonel.
-
Surprise.
-
Well, what do you think
of your new quarters?
-
Well, did you do all this yourself?
-
Naturally. Even moved the piano.
-
No. Mrs. Collingwood
and Mrs. O'Rourke helped me.
-
They were wonderful.
-
Mrs. Collingwood gave me
these things and the drapes...
-
...and Mrs. Grayson gave us
Great-Uncle Abraham.
-
He was a very famous man.
-
And Mrs. Tompkins gave us that chair,
and little Mrs. Bates gave us the stool.
-
Only it doesn't quite match the room.
-
And Francisco gave us Guadalupe.
-
How do you do?
-
She's our cook.
-
I'm proud of you.
-
Someday you're going to be
a proper soldier's wife.
-
And Dr. Wilkens
wanted you to have this.
-
-It's a little rumpsprung--
-What?
-
But very comfortable.
-
And I helped with the dinner.
-
I'm sorry, I forgot to tell you.
-
It does that sometimes.
-
Good evening, sir.
-
I'm sorry to interrupt, but Fort Grant
is flashing a general alarm, sir.
-
Have any of our patrols reported,
Mr. Gates?
-
No, sir.
-
Keep the wire open to Fort Grant.
-
- I'll return to the headquarters immediately.
- Yes, sir.
-
My cap and gloves. What's your name?
-
Guadalupe.
-
But, Dad, dinner.
-
Don't wait for me. I may be hours.
-
There'll be other dinners, Phil.
-
Yes, Dad.
-
It's all right, Guadalupe.
-
We'll cook other dinners together.
-
- Phil.
- Good evening, Miss Thursday.
-
-Having a party. I'm terribly sorr--
-No, you come right in, dear.
-
It's just a little welcome
for Lieutenant O'Rourke.
-
Your servant, ma'am.
-
Couldn't have come at a better time,
could she?
-
- No one more welcome.
- No, indeed.
-
Now, then, who shall get this prize?
-
Our host, of course.
-
I don't trust you, Sam Collingwood.
-
No, you shall sit here on my right,
next to Captain York.
-
Thank you.
-
So Lieutenant O'Rourke
can have a look at you.
-
- Well, I don't know whether that's fair.
- Why not?
-
- Because you'll have to look at him.
- Well, I hope she does.
-
- You don't drink wine, do you?
- No, thank you.
-
- Good girl, Philadelphia.
- Coffee, dear.
-
Were you born in Philadelphia?
-
No, Pomfret, Connecticut.
I was named after my mother.
-
Oh, she was born in Philadelphia?
-
No, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
She was named after Grandmother.
-
Grandmother was the first
Philadelphia in our family.
-
Oh, then she was--?
-
No, Provincetown, Massachusetts.
-
Ahem. Let's ta-- Let's talk about horses.
-
Do you ride, Pawtu--? Po--? Phil?
-
- Yes, I do.
- Well, good.
-
We'll have to order some nice
young officer to take you riding.
-
Ahem. Emily.
-
- Shall we leave the men to their cigars?
- All right.
-
- Have a cigar, Kirby, and I'll join you.
- Sit down, dear.
-
I can't tell you how wonderful it is to have
you here at the post, Mrs. Collingwood.
-
Oh. Oh, I think you'll get along
even without me.
-
- Without?
- We're just marking time, you know.
-
Sam has applied for transfer
to West Point as instructor.
-
Oh, I didn't know.
-
When are you leaving, captain?
-
Leaving? Leaving for where?
I'm not going anywhere.
-
Leave my own party?
-
Phil meant for the academy, Sam.
-
Oh, that.
-
Soon, I hope.
-
Or they may reject me.
-
Oh, Sam. Sam, they couldn't.
-
They've had my application
a long time, dear.
-
You know how the Army is, Sam.
-
Yes, and I know its opinion of me.
-
And you know our opinion of you too.
Isn't that enough?
-
And you know what the men
think of you, sir.
-
Captain, lieutenant, my compliments.
-
Well then, oh Genevieve
-
I'd give the world
-
To live again the lonely past
-
The rose of youth was dew-impearled
-
But now it withers in the blast
-
I see thy face in every dream
-
My waking thoughts are all of thee
-
Thy glance is in the starry beam
-
That falls along the summer sea
-
Oh Genevieve
-
Sweet Genevieve
-
The years may come The years may go
-
But still the hand of memory weaves
-
The blissful dreams
-
Of long ago
-
Bravo, Quincannon.
-
Thank you, Quincannon. Thank you.
-
One before each meal.
-
Sergeant, take him
back to the guardhouse.
-
There was sergeant John McAfferty
-
And Corporal Donahue
-
This is against all tradition.
-
A man comes to serenade a lady,
and what does he find?
-
Her husband and half the regiment
on the balcony.
-
- I am crushed.
- You're a faintheart, doctor.
-
You only serenade
when husbands are around.
-
And for good reason, ma'am.
-
Seeing what a sorry
romantic figure I cut...
-
...the husband takes pity on me
and brings out his best port.
-
Oh, good evening, Captain Collingwood.
-
-This is blackmail, but you'll find the 18--
-I know where it is.
-
Last time I looked,
there were four bottles of '46.
-
I expect to find my property intact.
-
- The insolence of the man.
- One, two, three-- It's all here.
-
You are an honorable man.
-
And since this is an occasion,
your glasses.
-
Come.
-
Let's drink a toast
to the young people.
-
Miss Thursday.
-
Mickey.
-
Then you will go riding
with me tomorrow?
-
Of course.
-
If you really want me to.
-
To the colonel's lady
and Mickey O'Rourke.
-
- Here's luck, huh?
- They'll need it, poor darlings.
-
Attention!
-
Men...
-
...today we gonna put you on the horses.
-
No more walking.
-
And by the time we get
through with youse...
-
...you'll be riding like senators,
the all of youse.
-
And your rough-riding sergeant
will be Sergeant Beaufort.
-
Relax!
-
Attention.
-
Gentlemen, this is a horse.
-
You will observe it has no saddle.
-
The reason it has no saddle...
-
...is because it will be easier for you
to stay on without the saddle.
-
Now, before we progress...
-
...did any of you gentlemen serve
with the Southern Arms...
-
...during the War Between the States?
-
Yes, sir. I had the pride, sir,
of serving with Bedford Forrest.
-
- I am proud to shake your hand.
- Thank you, sir.
-
I hope you have the pleasure
of buying me a drink on payday.
-
An honor, sir.
-
You are now an acting corporal.
-
-Sergeant--
-Please. Please, Sergeant Mulcahy.
-
Oh, let them have one.
-
And now, gentlemen,
this gallant soldier...
-
...this member of the greatest cavalry force
that ever lived...
-
...will show you Yankees how to ride.
-
Attention!
-
Now you see how easy it is, gentlemen.
-
Gentlemen, to your horses.
-
- Who will be the first volunteer?
- I am.
-
- Ah, come on. Get up here.
- Get him up here.
-
- A gentleman always remounts. Get up.
- That's it.
-
Come on, then!
-
That's it.
-
Stay on your horses, men.
-
And if you fall off, get on again.
-
It's an order in the Army,
and a custom...
-
...that when you fall off your horses,
you mount again like a gentleman.
-
Stay on that horse.
-
Get back on your horse.
-
Get back on that horse right now.
Get back on that horse.
-
Hey, let go. Hey, get off of him.
Get him off.
-
Get back on that horse.
-
- Now, come on, get on that horse again.
- Get up there on that horse.
-
Hey, come back here!
-
Where do you think you're going?
Come back here with that horse.
-
- What's the matter with you?
- Get up there.
-
- Come on. Get off the horse.
- Stay on him there.
-
Watch it down there, boys.
-
Here! Here! Come back here!
-
- Come on. Get into it.
- There's a boy.
-
Hey.
-
Hey, get back up on that horse.
What's the matter?
-
Knees close together.
Everybody just get right where they--
-
- Hey, what are you doing?
- Get him up there. Come on.
-
Stay on that horse, will you?
-
Take the reins in both hands.
Press in tight with your knees.
-
Look at the legs on that one.
-
- One at a time on that horse.
- Hold him.
-
Watch out, everybody. Now listen to me.
-
Get that horse.
-
Sir, I beg to report I lost my Yankee cap.
-
Thank you, sir. Thank you.
-
Thank you, sir. Thank you.
-
Hey, you, up there straight. Get up.
-
Thank you, sir. Thank you.
-
Isn't this wonderful?
-
What's that over there?
-
Blue Mesa.
-
Can't we go there?
-
Well, it's not as close as it appears,
Miss Thursday.
-
Are you anxious to return to the fort,
lieutenant?
-
Oh, no, Miss Thursday.
-
Don't you like the name of Phil, Michael?
-
Of course I do, Phil.
-
And right over there,
that's where the telegraph line is.
-
That's our main headache around here.
-
- Runs from here to Fort Grant.
- You mean, where the smoke is?
-
Smoke?
-
Is it an Indian signal?
-
No, it's not an Indian signal.
-
The line went dead, sir.
Right in the middle of the last word.
-
"Meacham reports Diablo's band
decamped from reservation.
-
Last seen headed S-O-U-T--"
-
South, obviously.
Or southeast or southwest.
-
Which means they may have crossed
10 miles from here or 200.
-
- We can't patrol all of it.
- I'm fully aware of that, captain.
-
Think they're headed for the border
to join Cochise?
-
That's my opinion, sir.
-
And these are the three
main passes to Mexico?
-
Well, there are others, but those
are the ones the Apache use most.
-
Two of them in our patrol area.
-
Captain York, you and Mr. O'Rourke
take a troop and patrol the area.
-
- Mr. O'Rourke is not on the post, sir.
- Why not?
-
- He's out riding, sir, with your daughter.
- He what?
-
- How long ago? When did they go out?
- Almost three hours past, sir.
-
- Three?
- Are you sure it's that long?
-
- Positive, sir.
- Blasted young fool.
-
O'Rourke, hasn't that idiot son of yours
sense to know this country's not safe?
-
Taking my daughter riding.
-
Your daughter is as safe with my son
as she would be with any man.
-
How safe is that
with the Apaches on the warpath?
-
Phil, get back!
-
Collingwood, take out a patrol at once.
-
York, pass the word to A and B.
-
Tell them to turn to,
full field equipment.
-
Rations for a week.
-
Wagon's burned. Two men dead.
-
Lieutenant Thursday.
-
Repair wagon, sir, burned.
Two troopers, Barry and Williams, dead.
-
Spread-eagle on the wheels, roasted.
-
- And my daughter saw all that?
- Yes, sir.
-
- I'll take your report inside, mister.
- Yes, sir.
-
Are you all right, Phil?
-
Yes, Dad. I'm all right.
-
Take her inside, will you?
-
Must have jumped them at sundown.
-
It was a pretty big party.
Twenty-five or thirty, anyway.
-
Mescalero Apaches.
-
I found this.
-
- Blood.
- Apaches carry off their dead.
-
It's Mescaleros, all right. Diablo's band.
-
You say their trail led off to the south?
-
It headed that way, sir, but...
-
You didn't follow it
long enough to find out?
-
No, sir. I couldn't take that risk
with Miss Thursday, sir.
-
Your caution, Mr. O'Rourke,
is commendable...
-
...but somewhat belated.
-
My compliments
on the completeness of this report.
-
It speaks a knowledge
of the savage Indian...
-
...which I am sure you did not
acquire at the military academy.
-
I call it to your attention...
-
...that in taking my daughter riding
without bespeaking my permission...
-
...you have been guilty of behavior...
-
...more consistent with that
of an uncivilized Indian...
-
...than an officer and a gentleman.
-
If I have not made myself
sufficiently clear, mister...
-
...I will add this:
-
You will not again ride with my daughter.
-
And, for reasons which I feel it
unnecessary to go into...
-
...you will avoid her company
in the future.
-
But, colonel--
-
I speak to you not only
as your commanding officer...
-
...but as Philadelphia's father.
-
I think I am within a father's rights,
Captain York.
-
My daughter's life and safety
are precious to me.
-
And to me, sir, I assure you.
-
Then you will all the more readily
bow to my wishes.
-
Yes, sir.
-
Now, mister...
-
...you say the break was here?
-
- Yes, sir.
- Hmm. Excellent.
-
Send a wagon and a detail to repair
the wires and bring back the bodies.
-
Yes, sir. Sergeant major,
assemble a platoon from A Troop.
-
A platoon? I said a detail, captain.
An officer and four men.
-
But the Apaches may still be around.
-
I'm running a command,
not a debating society, York.
-
-Four men. I'll be in command--
-Mr. O'Rourke will be in command.
-
Mr. O'Rourke in command. Have them take
60 rounds of carbine ammunition per man.
-
That's a lot for men who've been
trained to shoot. Thirty will be ample.
-
Thirty will be ample.
-
And 18 per revolving pistol.
-
You'll call for volunteers.
-
- With the colonel's permission, I volunteer.
- Permission refused.
-
Carry out your orders, sergeant major.
-
You'll leave within the quarter-hour,
Mr. O'Rourke. Questions?
-
Michael.
-
You know what's expected of you now?
-
Sure, Dad, I know.
-
Derice, go get Quincannon
out of the guardhouse. Wait.
-
O'Feeney, go to the stables and find
Mulcahy, Shattuck and Johnny Reb.
-
Tell them they're volunteering
for a hazardous mission.
-
Beyond the call of duty.
-
Tell them their regiment is proud of them.
Now get going.
-
Come on, come on.
-
You spoke before of a platoon
from A Troop, Captain York.
-
I suggest you assemble it.
-
Light marching equipment,
but full bandoleers.
-
We'll leave in 30 minutes.
I'll command, you'll accompany.
-
- You mean we're gonna trail the wagon?
- At a striking distance.
-
Collingwood.
-
You remember the paper
that Captain Robert E. Lee wrote...
-
...when he was at the Point?
-
The one on the trap
as a military weapon?
-
I do not share the popular view
of Captain Lee's ability as tactician...
-
...but that paper impressed me.
-
Particularly the maneuver
that Genghis Khan employed...
-
...in the battle of Kinsha in 1221.
-
You recall--?
-
- Hadn't you better be moving, captain?
- Yes, sir.
-
What, no debate this time, captain?
-
No debate, sir. No questions.
-
Troop is ready, sir.
-
You're not properly uniformed, captain.
Nor are your men.
-
They look like scratch farmers
on market day.
-
Their hats should be creased
fore and aft like a fedora.
-
And I don't like exposed galluses.
-
Yes, sir.
-
Move out in a column of twos, captain.
-
By twos! By the right flank!
-
Come on. Follow!
-
Woman, go on about your business.
-
Whoa!
-
Uh-oh.
-
Get busy with the wire, sergeant.
-
All right, you men.
Get out those blankets.
-
- And work fast.
- Barry and Williams.
-
Many a pint I had with both of them.
-
- Why, you--
- Sergeant!
-
Johnny Reb, drop it.
Men, let's get out of here. Fast.
-
- Bugler, raise those colors to full staff.
- Yes, sir.
-
Meacham.
-
This looks deserted.
-
He's here, all right. Meacham!
-
With the colonel's permission, sir.
-
The door is open, sir.
-
- Open the shutters. Get the stench out.
- Yes, sir.
-
Meacham.
-
Meacham.
-
- Well, Mr. York.
- Let's go, Meacham.
-
By your leave, sir.
-
Another exile in our wilderness.
-
Colonel Thursday,
our new commanding officer.
-
Your servant, Mr. Thursday.
-
-May the Lord--
-Colonel Thursday, Mr. Meacham.
-
Oh, bless you, I pay no attention
to military titles.
-
I don't believe in titles of any kind.
-
We're all his brothers, his children.
-
Even these savages entrusted to my care.
-
-I feed them and clothe them--
-And fill them full of rotgut whiskey.
-
I have a license.
-
Spirits have their uses.
This is not a healthy climate.
-
Perhaps the colonel would like a drink
after his ride.
-
No? Your health.
-
Mr. Meacham...
-
...a band of Indians
has left the reservation.
-
That's right. That Diablo and 30 others,
the ungrateful dogs.
-
I treat them well.
I have goods for them to buy.
-
-Knives, calico, wool--
-Cheap, shoddy trash.
-
No.
-
Mist-- Colonel Thursday,
you know how children are.
-
They like their bright toys.
-
Winchester seven-shot repeaters
are not toys.
-
Captain York, I am attempting
to question Mr. Meacham.
-
Yes, sir.
-
Right, sir.
-
There's no reason, to your knowledge...
-
...why a band of Apache should
go on the warpath?
-
Not the warpath.
Misguided maybe, like wayward children.
-
Mister, two of my troopers are dead.
Tortured to death.
-
Not by my Apaches.
Some other raiding party, perhaps.
-
How can you be sure?
-
We've taken Diablo and his band,
what's left of them.
-
- They'll be here soon.
- You'll keep them here.
-
You'll assign a troop
to keep them here.
-
That's what I've been telling Mr. York.
I leave it to you.
-
How can I, one lone man,
be responsible for all these savages?
-
Now you see what's happened.
-
Two of your men have been killed.
-
Brave men serving their country, as I am.
-
This wouldn't have happened
if the highhanded Mr. York--
-
-Oh, you mealy-mouthed--
-Captain York.
-
Mr. Meacham is a representative
of the United States government.
-
He will be treated with due respect.
-
- May I say something, sir?
- What is it?
-
No troop or squadron or regiment's gonna
keep the Apaches on this reservation...
-
...unless they wanna stay here.
-
Five years ago,
we made a treaty with Cochise.
-
He and his Chiricahuas
and some of the other Apache bands...
-
...came on the reservation.
-
They wanted to live here in peace,
and did for two years.
-
And then Meacham here was sent
by the Indian ring.
-
That's a lie. I'd been--
-
The dirtiest, most corrupt political group
in our history.
-
Then it began. Whiskey, but no beef.
Trinkets instead of blankets.
-
The women degraded, the children sickly,
and the men turning into drunken animals.
-
So Cochise did the only thing
a decent man could do.
-
He left. Took most of his people
and crossed the Rio Bravo into Mexico.
-
- He broke his treaty.
- Yes.
-
Rather than see his nation wiped out.
-
The law's the law, and I demand
that you soldier boys enforce it.
-
Any demands you wish to make...
-
...you will make through
official channels, Mr. Meacham.
-
Do not again employ that word
in my presence.
-
- No offense, sir. No offense.
- Ready, sir.
-
- Lead the way. Come along, sir.
- Where?
-
- To your storehouse.
- There's nothing in there.
-
Here, sir.
-
- Mister-- Colonel Thursday, I protest.
- Put it in writing.
-
- What's in these boxes?
- It's marked "Bibles," sir.
-
-That's all it is--
-Open them up.
-
What's this scale used for?
-
Weigh government beef rations.
-
Hmm. I seem to have gained 75 pounds
since I came to Arizona.
-
Bibles, sir.
-
Sergeant, pour me some scripture.
-
What's in this, brimstone and sulfur?
-
You know what it is.
I'm entitled to keep it.
-
Your license may permit you
to keep medicinal whiskey...
-
...but this is no whiskey.
-
- You're not used to frontier whiskey.
- I don't know. I've tasted most everything.
-
Sergeant, you a judge of whiskey?
-
Well, sir, some people say I am,
and some say I'm not, sir.
-
Tell me what you make of this.
-
Well...
-
...it's better than no whiskey at all, sir.
-
Yes, sir.
-
Since it doesn't appear to be whiskey...
-
...and since it seems to be of highly
inflammable and dangerous liquid...
-
...I find there's only one thing to do,
Mr. Meacham: destroy it.
-
I protest. I'll write Washington.
I'll have you busted.
-
Mr. Meacham, you're a blackguard,
a liar, a hypocrite...
-
...and a stench in the nostrils
of honest men. If it were in my power...
-
...I'd hang you from the nearest tree,
leave your carcass for the buzzards.
-
But as you are a representative
of the United States government...
-
...I pledge you the protection
and cooperation of my command.
-
Good day, sir.
-
What about these Winchesters, sir?
-
The pins are bent. Sergeant Mulcahy,
straighten them with this.
-
You heard what he said.
-
Destroy it.
-
"Destroy it," he says.
-
Well, boys...
-
...we've a man's work ahead of us
this day.
-
Unlock the door.
-
-Michael--
-Prisoners, outside.
-
Michael.
-
Private Mulcahy.
-
Private Shattuck.
-
Private Quincannon.
-
And Private Beaufort.
-
I'm ashamed of you, the whole of youse.
-
You're a disgrace to your regiment.
-
If there was a regulation for it,
I'd make you take the tippler's oath.
-
Michael.
-
Volunteers for the manure pile.
-
Left face.
-
Take them out of here.
-
Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip!
-
Now all together, men.
-
There was Sergeant John McAfferty and--
-
- Oh, shut up!
- Shut up.
-
Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip!
-
Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip!
-
Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip! Hip!
-
Assuming you found Cochise...
-
...would he listen to you,
would he believe you?
-
Cochise knows me, sir.
I've never lied to him.
-
And if you can assure him
decent treatment for his people...
-
I'll confess he interests me.
-
And these Eastern newspapers...
-
I hadn't realized Cochise
was so well-known.
-
Oh, he's known.
-
He's had the laugh on every troop
in the Southwest these three years.
-
Six campaigns, he's outgeneraled us,
outfought us, and outrun us.
-
That's just the point, sir.
-
There aren't enough troops in the whole
territory to make Cochise come back.
-
But one man, a man he trusts,
might persuade him.
-
A carbine against his spine
might be more persuasive.
-
Well, I'll go in unarmed, sir.
-
Can't fight my way in.
Either walk in or...
-
A man who brought Cochise back...
-
I'm for it, captain.
How many men will you need?
-
One, sir. Sergeant Beaufort.
-
- Private Beaufort, sir.
- Why him?
-
He speaks Spanish, so does Cochise.
-
My Apache has its limits.
-
Shouldn't you take another officer
instead?
-
- Sergeant Beaufort was a--
- Private Beaufort, sir.
-
Private Beaufort was a major
in the Confederate Army.
-
An aid to Jeb Stuart.
-
Hmm.
-
I remember Cadet Stuart.
-
- Quite.
- He was...
-
Were you saying something, captain?
-
I said, "Quite," sir.
-
I'd like to leave at once,
if the colonel has no questions.
-
- Hmm? What?
- Questions, sir?
-
No, no questions.
Proceed, captain. Take your ex-rebel.
-
- Thank you.
- That is all.
-
- Ready, Sergeant Beaufort?
- Yes, sir.
-
-Anything is preferable to shoveling--
-That's what I thought.
-
Well, here we go.
-
Private Mulcahy.
-
My compliments, sir.
-
Officer's pet.
Officer's pet, that's what he is.
-
How's your hangover?
-
Sir, you're
the nicest Yankee I've ever known.
-
Ah.
-
Well, let's go.
-
Quincannon, if that's you,
you can wait till payday. I'm not gonna--
-
Oh. Having dinner?
-
Well, yes, I will have a cup of tea.
-
And if you urge me,
I may even take a piece of pie.
-
Good evening, lieutenant.
I haven't been seeing much of you lately.
-
Please don't stand.
-
-Phil-- Miss Thursday, I--
-I had hoped you might call.
-
You did leave your card, didn't you?
-
This is your card, isn't it?
-
Isn't it proper,
Sergeant Major O'Rourke...
-
...for an officer to call
after he's left his card?
-
It would be, except that--
-
The colonel has forbidden me
to address you, Miss Thursday.
-
But you are addressing me,
aren't you, lieutenant?
-
And if a young man
hasn't enough gumption...
-
...to address a young woman who,
even if her father is a colonel, well...
-
...I don't think he's as brave
as I think he is.
-
- Do you, Mrs. O'Rourke?
- No, I don't.
-
Ma'am, your father is
Michael's commanding officer.
-
His orders will be obeyed.
-
Miss Thursday,
I'm afraid you'd best leave us.
-
Michael O'Rourke.
-
Sit down, dear.
-
And you sit down yourself.
-
And you, have you nothing to say?
-
Or have you learned your manners
from this big bull of a man?
-
There's much I'd say,
if I could get a word in edgewise.
-
Miss Thurs--
-
Miss Thursday...
-
...if I had any thought that it really mattered
to you whether I spoke to you or not...
-
But I couldn't believe you felt
the same way about me.
-
And what way was that, lieutenant?
-
Well, I...
-
Miss Thursday,
if you'll just step outside...
-
The colonel, he come.
-
He very angry.
-
He know she here.
-
Come, Philadelphia.
I'm here to bring you home.
-
I'm not ready to leave, Father.
I've been invited to dinner.
-
Won't you stay, colonel?
-
Thank you, Mrs. O'Rourke.
Another time, perhaps.
-
Well, at least allow me
to take your hat?
-
I beg your pardon. Come, Phil.
-
Colonel Thursday, sir, I would--
-
Mr. O'Rourke, I want no words
with you at this time.
-
-But, colonel, sir--
-You heard me, sir.
-
Now get out of here
before I say something I may regret.
-
This is my home, Colonel Owen Thursday.
-
And in my home I will say
who is to get out and who is to stay.
-
And I will remind the colonel
that his presence here, uninvited...
-
...is contrary to Army regulations...
-
...not to mention the code
of a well-mannered man.
-
Dad, please.
-
Colonel Thursday, sir,
what I've been trying to tell you, sir...
-
...is that I love your daughter.
-
And I ask her now,
in your presence, to be my wife.
-
Yes, Michael.
-
I see.
-
- Philadelphia, I ask you to reconsider.
- No, Father.
-
I tell you, this is not
a proper or suitable marriage for you.
-
I can't believe that.
-
Sergeant Major O'Rourke,
you will pardon me for speaking bluntly.
-
But as a noncommissioned officer,
you are aware of the barrier...
-
- ...between your class and mine.
- I am, sir.
-
But Michael's an officer.
Not that it makes any difference.
-
It makes a difference in the Army, Phil.
-
The sergeant major knows that,
and his son should know it.
-
The Army, sir, is not the whole world.
-
No, but it's your world,
and your mother's world and my world.
-
I'm not as young as I once was.
With the colonel's permission...
-
- ...I'll put in for retirement.
- That won't be necessary, sergeant major.
-
Nor need you, mister,
give up your profession.
-
My daughter is not of legal age.
She cannot marry without my consent.
-
I'll be of age in two years.
-
Sergeant major, I beg your pardon for
entering your quarters without invitation.
-
Mr. O'Rourke, your pardon for my words.
Come, Phil.
-
I'm not a child, and I love Michael.
-
I'll arrange at once
for your return to the East.
-
You'll have two years
to forget each other.
-
Mrs. O'Rourke...
-
...my respects, ma'am.
-
- Ready?
- Ready.
-
Put the beer right back there on the table,
boys. One on each end.
-
Come on, step lively, step lively.
-
Krausmeyr, one sour note out of you
tonight and back you go shoeing horses.
-
The same goes for you, Derice.
-
Now you've got your stripes back...
-
...I expect you to be on your best behavior
and set a good example for the men.
-
Oh, don't worry, Michael, my darling.
-
We'll be the models of decorum.
Now, where's the punch?
-
-Mulcahy, I--
-Michael.
-
Mulcahy, you'll not be spiking
the refreshments this year like you did last.
-
Oh, just one bottle.
-
-No, sir--
-Michael.
-
Ah, go on, the whole of youse.
-
- Good evening, O'Rourke.
- Good evening, doctor.
-
And Mrs. O'Rourke.
-
- It's a fine night for a dance. Clear and dry.
- Yes, sir.
-
- Which reminds me...
- Right over there, sir.
-
- Good evening, O'Rourke.
- Good evening, sir.
-
- And Mrs. O'Rourke.
- Good evening.
-
Oh, sergeant major, you have no idea how
I've been looking forward to tonight.
-
I'm forever telling the captain...
-
...that it's the noncommissioned officers'
dance that is the nicest dance.
-
Don't you think so, Mrs. O'Rourke?
-
- Well, of course I do.
- And, sergeant major...
-
- ...will you please claim me for a dance?
- With the greatest of pleasure, ma'am.
-
-Uh, by the way, I--
-Right over there, sir.
-
Thank you, Krausmeyr.
-
Again, on behalf of the officers
of Fort Apache...
-
...I wish to thank the noncommissioned
officers and their ladies...
-
...for this grand party.
-
The food is exquisite.
-
And the punch, wow.
-
Good evening, Krausmeyr.
-
And so, as is customary at Fort Apache...
-
...the commanding officer,
Colonel Owen Thursday...
-
...will lead out the wife
of our sergeant major...
-
...the charming Mrs. Michael O'Rourke.
-
With your permission...
-
Mrs. O'Rourke, may I have the honor?
-
It will be a pleasure, Colonel Thursday.
-
And now, Sergeant Major O'Rourke
will lead out the colonel's lady...
-
...in this case, his lovely daughter,
Miss Philadelphia Thursday.
-
And now, ladies and gentlemen...
-
...quickly take your partners
for the grand march.
-
- My pleasure, miss.
- Thank you.
-
Get out of my way, Meacham,
or I'll break both your legs.
-
Of course, with your permission.
-
Walk him around,
then rub him down, will you, son?
-
Captain York.
-
Sir.
-
- Well?
- Cochise has crossed the river, sir.
-
He's coming in with all his people,
wants to talk peace.
-
- He's returned to American soil?
- Yes, sir.
-
Now, with the colonel's permission...
-
...I'd like to shake some of this Mexican
adobe dust and get back to the dance.
-
There'll be no time for that.
The regiment moves out at dawn.
-
The regiment?
-
Cochise says he'll meet with you
and me and Meacham.
-
We'll take a small detail and go unarmed.
-
I've arranged a rendezvous
this side of the Dragoons.
-
Sergeant major, you'll stop the dance.
-
Pass the word to the first sergeants,
prepare their troops to march at dawn.
-
Troop commanders will meet
at headquarters at once.
-
Colonel, if you send out the regiment,
Cochise will think I've tricked him.
-
Exactly. We have tricked him.
-
Tricked him into returning to American soil.
I intend to see that he stays here.
-
Colonel Thursday,
I gave my word to Cochise.
-
No man is gonna
make a liar out of me, sir.
-
Your word to a breechclouted savage?
-
An illiterate, uncivilized murderer
and treaty-breaker?
-
There's no question of honor, sir,
between an American officer and Cochise.
-
There is to me, sir.
-
Captain York...
-
...you may have commanded
your own regiment in the late war...
-
...but so long as you command a troop
in mine, you will obey my orders.
-
You have your instructions,
sergeant major.
-
Ladies and gentlemen...
-
...officers and noncommissioned officers,
your attention, please.
-
By order of the commanding officer...
-
...this night's entertainment will conclude
with the playing of the next dance.
-
After the dance, all first sergeants...
-
...quartermasters, saddler sergeants,
farriers, cooks and bakers...
-
...report to me at headquarters.
-
Ladies and gentlemen...
-
...the noncommissioned officers
of Fort Apache...
-
...offer their deep regrets.
-
And on their behalf, I wish to thank you
for attending this dance.
-
Krausmeyr, if you please.
-
Is it to your taste, Johnny, darling?
-
Column of fours.
-
- First troop, fours left.
- Fours left.
-
Fours left.
-
Ho!
-
Fours left.
-
Ho!
-
I'm lonesome since I crossed the hill
-
And over the moor and valley
-
Such heavy thoughts my heart do fill
Since parting with my Sally
-
I seek no more the fine and gay
For each does but remind me
-
How swift the hours did pass away
With the girl I've left behind me
-
I seek no more the fine and gay
For each does but remind me
-
How swift the hours did pass away
With the girl I've left behind me
-
Mrs. Collingwood. Excuse me, ma'am.
It's Captain Collingwood's transfer, ma'am.
-
It just came through.
-
Oh, run. Run or send someone after.
Call him back.
-
Yes, Aunt Emily.
-
- I don't know.
- What is there to know? Go get him.
-
Sam's no coward. He never was.
-
Who's talking about cowardice?
-
Don't be a fool, woman.
-
Tom, get mounted.
Go bring Captain Collingwood back.
-
No.
-
- Keep this for the captain's return.
- Yes, ma'am.
-
I can't see him.
-
All I can see is the flags.
-
Squadron, halt!
-
It's the encampment, sir.
-
Must be about a mile up.
-
Three hundred wickiups or more.
-
Very good.
-
Bugler, my compliments to Captain York.
-
- Have him report to me.
- Yes, sir.
-
Yes?
-
Is that approximately where you were
to meet Cochise, captain?
-
Just about.
-
My officers will address me as "sir,"
Captain York.
-
Yes, sir. Will that be all, sir?
-
It will not.
-
I propose to deploy the men,
two troops to the north, one to the east.
-
- We will then converge on the encampment.
- I wouldn't do that, sir.
-
I'm not asking your advice, captain.
I'm merely stating.
-
The Apache, sir,
are neither to the north nor the east.
-
Nor are they in their encampment.
-
But if you'd have been watching the
dust swirls to the south like most of us...
-
...you'd see that they're right there.
-
That's Alchesay.
-
They outnumber us four to one.
-
Do we talk or fight?
-
You seem easily impressed
by numbers, captain.
-
However,
I'll honor your word to Cochise.
-
Tell him we've come to talk.
-
Ride on!
-
Gentlemen, I have the honor...
-
...to present the great hereditary war chief
of the Apache nation, Cochise.
-
Get on with it, captain.
-
Take over, Beaufort.
-
Good afternoon.
-
Gentlemen, this is Alchesay,
head of the White Mountain Apaches...
-
...Satanta of the Mescaleros...
-
...and the Chiricahua medicine man...
-
...named Jerome in our language,
but in Spanish, Geronimo.
-
Well, time to get on with it, Beaufort.
-
- What's he saying?
- That the Apaches are a great race, sir.
-
They've never been conquered.
-
But it is not well for a nation
to be always at war.
-
The young men die.
-
The women sing sad songs.
-
And the old ones are hungry
in the winter.
-
And so I led my people from the hills.
-
And then came this man.
-
- What did he say?
- Well, sir...
-
...a free translation would be that
Meacham's a yellow-bellied polecat...
-
...of dubious antecedents
and conjectural progeny.
-
Cochise's words,
of course, sir, not mine.
-
That's a matter of opinion.
-
He is worse than war.
-
He not only killed the men...
-
...but the women...
-
...and the children...
-
...and the old ones.
-
We looked to the great white father
for protection.
-
He gave us slow death.
-
We will not return
to your reservation...
-
...while that man is there...
-
...or anyone like him.
-
Send him away
and we will speak of peace.
-
If you do not send him away...
-
...there will be war.
-
And for each one of us that you kill...
-
- ...10 white men will die.
- Are you threatening us?
-
- Don't interrupt. It's an insult.
- I'll not be threatened. Beaufort.
-
No preliminary nonsense with him,
no ceremonial phrasing.
-
Straight from the shoulders.
Do you hear me?
-
They're recalcitrant swine.
They must feel it.
-
He's only speaking the truth, sir.
-
Is there anyone in this regiment
that understands an order?
-
- What does the colonel wish me to say?
- Tell him I find him without honor.
-
Tell him they're not talking to me
but to the United States government.
-
Tell him that government orders them
to return to their reservation.
-
And tell him if they've not started
by dawn, we will attack. Tell him that.
-
Bugler...
-
...sound forward.
-
Forward.
-
Forward. Ho!
-
Forward, ho!
-
I don't see them. Not a one.
-
Well, they're down there, sir,
among the rocks.
-
- Have you seen them, captain?
- I don't have to. I know.
-
- How?
- Because if I were Cochise...
-
...that's where I'd take up position.
-
And that dust cloud beyond?
-
It's an Apache trick. Probably squaws
and children dragging mesquite.
-
Very ingenious, captain.
-
You make me suspect your Cochise
has studied under Alexander the Great...
-
...or Bonaparte, at the least.
-
March your troops.
We'll charge in a column of fours.
-
Mounted in fours?
That's suicide, colonel.
-
- I tell you, they're down there.
- York!
-
Captain York, you're relieved
of command of your troop.
-
There is no room in this regiment
for a coward.
-
At your service, sir.
-
- Bugler, pick up Captain York's gauntlet.
- Yes, sir.
-
I'm no duelist, captain.
-
I will decide whether I will answer you
with pistols or a general court-martial.
-
You will remain on the ridge, in safety,
with the supply train.
-
Take O'Rourke with you.
-
Gentlemen, you have your orders.
-
Are there any other questions?
-
Captain Collingwood?
-
No questions, Owen.
-
Gentlemen, join your troops.
-
A charge. Mounted in fours.
-
- They're madmen.
- And I'm to stay with the wagon train.
-
And take O'Rourke with me.
-
You'll find Lieutenant O'Rourke
with his troops, sir.
-
And thank you.
-
Good luck.
-
- Good luck, men.
- Thank you, sir.
-
Lieutenant O'Rourke, follow me.
-
-But the troops, sir--
-Don't argue.
-
- Mulcahy, take over.
- Captain York--
-
Get out of here, you scut, or I'll put you
across my knee and belt the pants off you.
-
Get out now.
-
As you were, men.
-
Good luck be to you.
-
Wheel the wagons.
-
Get them on the ridge.
-
Come on, get the horses
up behind there.
-
Come on. Get them over there.
-
Get those teams off.
-
All right, break out
the picks and shovels.
-
Come on. Get them over there.
-
- Come on.
- Get them unhooked.
-
Carry on, boy.
-
What are you doing, man?
-
- All right, get them over.
- Come on. Get it over. Let's go.
-
- Get her over.
- Get her over.
-
All right, come on. Lean it over.
-
Lean it over there. Let's go.
-
Turn it over.
-
Mickey.
-
Lean it over. Let's go.
-
Turn it over.
-
Get to Fort Grant.
Tell them where we are.
-
Tell them we may still be alive
if they hurry. Move.
-
And marry that girl!
-
Trooper.
-
Trooper.
-
Stand by your guns, men.
Stand by your guns.
-
Flarety, you're in charge.
I'll be back.
-
We've dug in on the ridge, sir.
-
Plenty of water and ammunition.
-
I sent a courier to Fort Grant,
if we can only hold out.
-
Here, get on my horse.
-
I'll trouble you for your saber, captain.
-
My saber?
-
I must rejoin my command.
-
The command is wiped out, sir,
and there's nothing we can do about it.
-
I'm not asking your opinion,
Captain York.
-
When you command this regiment,
and you probably will, command it.
-
Your saber, sir.
-
Any questions, captain?
-
No questions.
-
This time, you were late, Owen.
-
You have my apologies.
-
Sergeant Major O'Rourke,
my apologies, sir.
-
You can save them, sir,
for our grandchildren.
-
Hold your fire, men.
-
Hold your fire.
-
However, gentlemen, I warn you,
this may be a long campaign.
-
It may be weeks before you have
any headlines for your newspapers.
-
If we catch Geronimo,
that will be headline enough.
-
And more glory for your regiment.
-
He must have been a great man.
-
And a great soldier.
-
No man died more gallantly...
-
...nor won more honor for his regiment.
-
Of course, you're familiar with the famous
painting of Thursday's charge, sir.
-
Yes, I saw it when last in Washington.
-
That was a magnificent work.
-
There were massed columns of Apaches
in their war paint and feather bonnets...
-
...and here was Thursday,
leading his men in that heroic charge.
-
Correct in every detail.
-
He's become almost a legend already.
-
He's the hero
of every schoolboy in America.
-
But what of the men who died with him?
-
- Uh, what of Collingworth and--?
- Collingwood.
-
Oh, of course, Collingwood.
-
That's the ironic part of it.
-
We always remember the Thursdays,
but the others are forgotten.
-
You're wrong there.
-
They aren't forgotten
because they haven't died.
-
They're living. Right out there.
-
Collingwood and the rest.
-
And they'll keep on living
as long as the regiment lives.
-
Pay is $13 a month.
Their diet, beans and hay.
-
Maybe horsemeat
before this campaign is over.
-
Fight over cards or rotgut whiskey,
but share the last drop in their canteens.
-
Faces may change...
-
...and names...
-
...but they're there.
-
They're the regiment.
-
The regular Army.
-
Now and 50 years from now.
-
They're better men
than they used to be.
-
Thursday did that.
-
He made it a command to be proud of.
-
- The command is formed, sir.
- Thank you, sergeant major.
-
And now it's time to move.
-
- Questions, gentlemen?
- No.
-
Thank you very much, colonel.
-
Gentlemen, this is my adjutant,
Lieutenant O'Rourke...
-
- ...who will take care of you.
- Gentlemen.
-
Mrs. Michael O'Rourke,
General Thursday's daughter.
-
- How do you do?
- And the Mrs. O'Rourke.
-
It's a pleasure, ma'am.
-
And this is
Michael Thursday York O'Rourke...
-
...the best man in the regiment.
Aren't you, you scut?
-
Forward face.
-
Ho!
-
I'm lonesome since I crossed the hill
-
And over the moor and valley
-
Such heavy thoughts my heart do fill
Since parting with my Sally
-
I seek no more the fine and gay
For each does but remind me
-
How swift the hours did pass away
With the girl I've left behind me