Northwest Passage is a
1940 film in
Technicolor, starring
Spencer Tracy,
Robert Young,
Walter Brennan,
Ruth Hussey, and others. It is based on a
novel by
Kenneth Roberts titled
Northwest Passage (1937).
It is set in the mid 18th century during the
French and Indian War (as the
Seven Years' War in
North America is usually known in the US). It gives an account of an attack by
Rogers' Rangers on Saint Francis (the current
Saint-François-du-Lac, Quebec), a settlement of the
Abenakis, an
American Indian tribe. The purpose of the raid is to avenge the many attacks on British settlers and deter further attacks.
The title is something of a misnomer, since this film is a truncated version of the original story, and only at the end do we find that
Rogers and his men are about to go on a search for the
Northwest Passage.
Plot
The film opens in the year 1759 with the arrival of Langdon Towne (
Robert Young) in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The son of a cordage (
rope)- maker and ship rigger, he returns from
Harvard University after being expelled for complaining about college food and drawing an unflattering picture of the President of Harvard College. Though disappointed, Langdon's family greets him with love, as does Elizabeth Browne (
Ruth Hussey), the daughter of a noted clergyman. Elizabeth's father (
Louis Hector) is less welcoming, however, and denigrates Langdon's aspirations to becoming a
painter. That evening, while drinking in the local tavern with friend Sam Livermore (
Lester......
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