"Across the Wide Missouri" with Clark Gable primed the pan. Then like just about everyone else my age "Jeremiah Johnson" and "A Man Called Horse" triggered the flint sparking. In those days it was difficult for a teenage kid to find a ML, much less one he could afford. My father got me a second hand HR in-line for Christmas and years later I was able to finally get a TC "Hawken." Decades later came "Last of the Mohicans" which, like everything Michael Mann directs, hit the target again.
What movie could be made now to again spark interest in ML? It's a shame that the growth in ML lately has been in very modern, in-line ML designed for hunting. Perhaps some of these avid hunters eventually get interested in the history and tradition of ML, but Fish & Game aren't doing much to encourage the original intent of ML hunting season by allowing modern scopes, bullets and ignition systems. This while companies like Lyman discontinue very important models like the Great Plains Rifle.
So what movie could be made now to renew interest in traditional ML? A biopic of Kit Carson would be good. A battle pic of Adobe Walls could rival "Zulu". If Hollywood insists on diversity, there are many Native heroes to choose from as well as Jim Beckworth, a freed slave who was a mountain man, scout and explorer.
What do you think?
What movie could be made now to again spark interest in ML? It's a shame that the growth in ML lately has been in very modern, in-line ML designed for hunting. Perhaps some of these avid hunters eventually get interested in the history and tradition of ML, but Fish & Game aren't doing much to encourage the original intent of ML hunting season by allowing modern scopes, bullets and ignition systems. This while companies like Lyman discontinue very important models like the Great Plains Rifle.
So what movie could be made now to renew interest in traditional ML? A biopic of Kit Carson would be good. A battle pic of Adobe Walls could rival "Zulu". If Hollywood insists on diversity, there are many Native heroes to choose from as well as Jim Beckworth, a freed slave who was a mountain man, scout and explorer.
What do you think?