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September Dawn

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  •  Trailer
In 1857 Capt. Alexander Fancher leads a wagon train of settlers across Utah to California. A confrontation with a congregation of Mormons soon leads to deadly consequences for all involved.
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Austin Chronicle
Muddled, sloppy, and obfuscating.
August 31, 2007
Los Angeles Times
The workmanlike craftsmanship of Cain's filmmaking almost (but never quite) smooths over the ham-fisted way he conceives the story.
August 30, 2007
Entertainment Insiders
Predictable, obvious, often silly.
November 08, 2007
New York Times
The maudlin, grotesque western September Dawn apes Schindler's List in hopes of creatinga Christian Holocaust picture.
August 24, 2007
TheMovieReport.com
Contriving a faux Romeo and Juliet romance as a point of entry for the audience shows how unimaginative the filmmakers are, and how blandly and uninvolving it plays shows how fairly clueless they are in going about their game plan.
September 05, 2007
Film Threat
Drama may benefit from attention to history, but history doesn't always make for good drama.
October 16, 2007
Boxoffice Magazine
An already thin veneer of historical truth wears off fairly quickly in this surprisingly dull and melodramatic low-budget western.
August 30, 2007
New York Press
For all the guns fired in the film, [director] Cain aims the largest one at his foot-and pulls the trigger again and again.
August 30, 2007
Chicago Reader
The villainous turns by Jon Voight (as a hard-hearted Mormon bishop) and Terence Stamp (as a bloodthirsty Brigham Young) would have been more fun if they weren't part of such a clumsy campaign to lay this tragedy at the church's doorstep.
December 03, 2007
Entertainment Weekly
A plodding and highly questionable history lesson.
August 29, 2007
AV Club
With its complete lack of empathy for early Mormons and simplistic rendering of historical figures, September Dawn is that rare movie that actually deserves whatever condemnation might come from religious groups.
August 27, 2007