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Pharaoh's Army

  • 1995
  • PG-13
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
769
YOUR RATING
Pharaoh's Army (1995)
Coming-of-AgeDramaWarWestern

During the American Civil War, a Union Army captain leads his ragtag cavalry force across a misty stream to a remote farm to capture enemy cattle.During the American Civil War, a Union Army captain leads his ragtag cavalry force across a misty stream to a remote farm to capture enemy cattle.During the American Civil War, a Union Army captain leads his ragtag cavalry force across a misty stream to a remote farm to capture enemy cattle.

  • Director
    • Robby Henson
  • Writer
    • Robby Henson
  • Stars
    • Chris Cooper
    • Patricia Clarkson
    • Kris Kristofferson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    769
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robby Henson
    • Writer
      • Robby Henson
    • Stars
      • Chris Cooper
      • Patricia Clarkson
      • Kris Kristofferson
    • 14User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast29

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    Chris Cooper
    Chris Cooper
    • Captain John Hull Abston
    Patricia Clarkson
    Patricia Clarkson
    • Sarah Anders
    Kris Kristofferson
    Kris Kristofferson
    • Preacher
    Robert Joy
    Robert Joy
    • Chicago
    Richard Tyson
    Richard Tyson
    • Rodie
    Frank Clem
    Frank Clem
    • Neely
    Huckleberry Fox
    Huckleberry Fox
    • Newt
    Will Lucas
    • Boy
    Mac Miles
    • Israel
    Robert P. Sampson Jr.
    • Narrator
    • (as Robert E. Sampson)
    Maude Mitchell
    Maude Mitchell
    • Preacher's Wife
    Rebecca Ling Rylands
    • Mourner
    • (as Rebecca Ryland)
    Scott Coffman
    • Mourner
    Gale Wilson
    • Mourner
    Stacie Coffman
    • Mourner
    Leon Cain
    Leon Cain
    • Mourner
    Alvie Cox
    • Mourner
    Zach Lee
    • Mourner
    • Director
      • Robby Henson
    • Writer
      • Robby Henson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.5769
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    Featured reviews

    8RodReels-2

    Civil Tones

    This is one of my personal favorites, a rare little gem that seems to be undiscovered by the general population. Chris Cooper and Patricia Clarkson form the heart of the piece in what is a well-chosen cast. Few movies have ever captured the true hostilities that undergirded the Civil War, but this one seems to capture all the right tones and moods. If you're a fan of the book, Cold Mountain, try this movie out and see if you don't think it makes a good companion piece.
    8rkhen

    Excellent reflection of reality

    Pharoah's Army is a rare, realistic view of the American Civil War, which, like all wars, mostly happened "somewhere else". While almost all war movies focus on that "somewhere else", the pinpoints of battle and battlefields, this one courageously covers the other ninety per cent of the war, in the hills and countryside far from sweeping drama.

    The director's gift for understatement and getting complex emotions across without phoney speeches give it almost a documentary feel, as does his willingness to let the late autumn Appalachians have their own beauty, without staging or drawing attention to it.

    His most courageous choice was making the characters normal people: neither evil nor noble, just people, in a hopeless, hurtful time. The actors are incredibly powerful, all of them, down to the dog and the mule.

    People who know little about the American Civil War, and the scar it left on American society -- still deep in the national psyche, even today -- may find the movie thin; the director assumes viewers are well-informed on these points, and doesn't do any "teaching" on them. But Pharoah's Army is one of the best of its genre, and a badly needed perspective that few other directors have explored. It certainly commanded my attention, from start to finish.
    7dallasryan

    A pretty good film on a deeper level

    Without giving away the story, it's a pretty deep film on many levels from pain, to to hate to revenge and retribution to entitlement and remembering and forgetting all the reasons why we hate certain people in the first place.

    Top class acting by Chris Cooper and Patricia Clarkson. Also very great performances by Kris Kristofferson and Richard Tyson. A film worth seeing and perhaps even, learning from.
    7Wuchakk

    REAL LIFE Cinema

    Let's face it, there aren't that many great Civil War films out there. "Glory," "The Horse Soldiers" and "Ride With the Devil" are the only ones I recall off hand; "The Blue and the Gray" and "Cold Mountain" also have numerous good points. "Gettysburg," on the other hand, is a bloated, melodramatic, artificial bore (made exclusively for Civil War buffs, whatever that is); I've never seen its prequel.

    The peculiarly-titled "Pharaoh's Army" is a 1995 indie film about a real-life incident that took place in Kentucky during the Civil War. Because Kentucky was a border state the allegiances of its people were split between North & South. I'm sure it was hard to be neutral.

    THE PLOT: A Union captain (Chris Cooper) and four soldiers invade a young widow's farm in the Kentucky wilderness (the widow is played by Patricia Clarkson); since her husband fought and died for the Confederacy they supposedly have the right to her livestock, even though she argues that she and her boy will likely starve come winter. One of the soldiers is accidentally wounded and they are forced to stay for a few days. The captain attempts to be a gentleman and even helps out on the small farm, but he fails to win any kind of favor with the widow, who rightly views them as nothing more than invading enemies. Events turn deadly and the captain, even though a good-hearted gentleman, is forced into an intense position.

    Although the story is based on real events and takes place during the Civil War, this is not an epic war film with big battle scenes, strategizing generals, etc. The entire film takes place in and around the widow's small farm and focuses solely on the events that take place there. This limited scope may turn some viewers off.

    Even though this is a small indie film, the score, cast, acting and writing are all top notch. The story is fairly slow-paced and there are no cataclysmic events to arouse those with ADD. The first time I saw it, I thought it was good, but not great. I viewed it again about a year later (earlier this summer) and liked it even more. Lately images of this picture have popped into my mind and something occurred to me: The way the film plays out and is presented to the viewer is REAL LIFE. What I mean is that it's almost as if someone went back in time and actually filmed the actual events. This is a good thing as far as I'm concerned. I tire of all the silly hollywoodisms common in modern American cinema -- supposedly humorous one-liners, unrealistic action scenes, excessive explosions, melodrama, unconvincing dialogue, etc.

    The ending is powerful as the captain, a good man, is thrust into a position of cold-blooded murder in the name of war. It's intense, and so REAL. The insanity of war can easily turn the best of us into heartless killers.

    The cover of the DVD prominently features Kris Kristofferson, but his role as a pro-South Kentucky preacher is relatively minor.

    FYI: "Pharaoh's Army" was actually filmed in Kentucky, no doubt near where the real events took place.

    BOTTOM LINE: This is a small film about a minor peripheral incident during the Civil War. It's not a big league Hollywood picture with the corresponding melodramatic, pretentiousness like, say, "Saving Private Ryan" (although that film has some undeniable positive qualities, like the D-Day invasion, there are way too many forced, artificial moments and dialogue -- remember the moronic dog tag scene?). "Pharaoh's Army" is generally a quiet film and likely won't blow you away or anything. What it has in its favor, however, is unpretentious REALISM. It's refreshing; and it will stay with you.

    GRADE: B+
    9Uneken

    No heroes, no villains..

    It is characteristic that this film is not better known. It obviously lacks most elements that a successful theater film needs: heroes, villains, conflict and resolution, romantic love interest..

    Everything is topsy-turvy here, nothing works out as it should, everyone is clumsy, sad, angry, hurt and hungry and nobody has a solution for anything. In short: it is war and it is hell for everybody involved. People try to do best, but interests, allegiances and so called duty interfere. The picture transports us back in time to the Civil War with an intensity seldom seen in today's cinema. Straightforward honest images of an intense beauty. The actors are very well cast for the story and they make the characters come truly alive in front of our eyes.

    A silver dollar in a heap of nickels!

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    Related interests

    Elsie Fisher in Eighth Grade (2018)
    Coming-of-Age
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Band of Brothers (2001)
    War
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Original story took place at Meshack's Creek, Kentucky, in 1862; the town no longer exists. Tompkinsville is the nearest town officially recognized by the US Postal Service, roughly 6 miles to the west of the creek. The general area (Cumberland Gap), during the Civil War, experienced some of the most brutal clashes of the war; not only battles, but brother against brother and neighbor against neighbor.
    • Goofs
      If the dead chickens had already begun to smell then it's likely that eating them would not have been a good idea.
    • Quotes

      Chicago: [returning] Captain, there was a barn burnt down. Some old man and his wife were killed.

      Captain John Hull Abston: Where?

      Chicago: There.

      [pointing]

      Rodie: No more than five miles up the creek.

      Captain John Hull Abston: [to Sarah] You know who's place it is?

      Sarah Anders: Yankees.

      Rodie: Ma'am they weren't Yankees. Just some old farmer and his wife.

      Sarah Anders: They sent two boys into the Union Army.

      [splits hatefully and goes into house]

      Rodie: [splits back] They were just farmers...

      Narrator: Like I said, the war was rough through here.

    • Soundtracks
      Love Lingers On
      Written by Vince Emmett

      Performed by Kelly Render Wilkinson

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 1995 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En defensa propia
    • Filming locations
      • Casey County, Kentucky, USA
    • Production companies
      • Cicada Films
      • ITVS International
      • Kentucky Educational Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $50,652
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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