3 Jan 2024

The Last Cartridge may be the oldest movie about Sepoy Rebellion in India 1857

This highly elaborate production purports to show the events of the Great Mutiny in India, eked out with the Colonel's beautiful daughter. Although I am fairly adept at accepting the screen conventions of the era -- just before the entire industry was turned on its head -- there are a number of problems for the modern viewer, particularly one who has read a little on the subject -- even though it mostly seems to be from George MacDonald Fraser's highly entertaining FLASHMAN novels.

For one thing, we need to accept that the natives of India consisted of Caucasians in white robes and burnooses waving scimitars around (representing, no doubt, the Muslims who later formed Pakistan) and Africans in loincloths waving pointed sticks and occasionally tossing globular bombs into the fort; and that the Regular British troops always fought in full dress uniform -- although at the end they were mostly wounded, with an invariable bandage around each heads. Finally, just as the savages are about to break into the fort, the Colonel puts his pistol to his daughter's head to make sure they don't violate her purity -- and misses.

To the modern eye it looks ridiculous, but the canny film makers of the period knew their audience and their taste for melodramatic balderdash. I'm sure this one was very popular, until the changes that D.W. Griffith began to make at Biography the same year forced the people in charge to adapt.A group of British soldiers are caught off-guard by Indian mutineers during the Sepoy Rebellion of 1857. Their numbers dwindle until only the commander and his daughter are left alive. The only hope is that the man they sent out for reinforcement returns. Otherwise, the commander saves the last cartridge for his daughter, lest the mutineers take her.