Important early film, directed by D.W. Griffith. Stephen (Wilfred Lucas) wants to marry his young ward Blanche Sweet and raise a family. She thinks it's a good idea - until she meets young Charles West. Of course, Mr. Lucas wants to kill Mr. West for coming between he and Ms. Sweet. Lucas, however, decides her happiness is more important; he gives the couple his blessing (and home); then, he re-joins the Army. Years pass. Sweet, West, and baby join a Wagon Train. When the Wagon train is attacked by Indians (Native Americans), Lucas arrives to serve as its military escort.

Watch for some great shots - like, the distant Wagon Train moving along with a bear in the foreground. The battle scenes are as exciting as you'd expect them to be in a Griffith production. In fact, the battles in "The Massacre" look more realistically fought than in thousands of subsequent westerns.

Also noteworthy is Griffith's presentation of the "Indians". Watch some of the Indians' body movements, and the way the camera lingers over some of their dead bodies - characters previously introduced sympathetically. Griffith presents Native American characters in a far more sympathetic manner than is usual for the time (and director). The film loses this characterization as the film progresses. The Indians' point-of-view is dropped. The "love triangle" of characters from the beginning end up only remotely involved in each others' lives; and, "The Massacre" misses out on some obvious dramatic possibilities for Sweet, Lucas, and West.

******* The Massacre (2/26/14) D.W. Griffith ~ Blanche Sweet, Wilfred Lucas, Charles West