A review in
Variety stated that "there are enough jolts of variety, as in the fight sequences and crazed hermit subplot, to hold audience interest," but "Standing Bear, as played by Iron Eyes Cody, is one end of a simplistic and basically racist attitude Pierce holds towards Indians. Standing Bear is the passive 'Injun,' the Warrior Tom figure. Then there are the ragamuffin savages who whoop, paint their faces and misuse their pronouns as in 'Me want 'em wampum.'" Linda Gross of the
Los Angeles Times wrote, "Pierce's hammy performance is the nastiest thing in his film, which is flagrantly corny but good-natured, with colorful scenes of duels and tribal rituals." Ray Conlogue of
The Globe and Mail commented, "The major casting weakness is Natalie Wood's sister, Lana, who is very wooden in a major role," while Cord as Grayeagle was "agreeable enough. On balance, 'agreeable' is a good word, and a fair one, for the movie. It's one step better than a blood 'n' feathers epic, a movie that hoped to have some integrity while remaining marketable, and has somewhat managed both." ==References==