I've found that viewing movies or even plays made on the basis of classics, expecially novels, such as The Last of the Mohicans before reading the source material, usually produces an expectation that can't be fulfilled when reading the books... The content of Cooper's novel is, in many ways, subtle and very indicative if it's time setting. For example, the soliquy by the girl's father, Munro; from this we learn that Cora is a Mullato produced from the union with his first wife at a duty station in the Caribbean. This was absolutely ground breaking to have a relationship, even through marriage, between races for an English officer of the day. (Munro does describe, in tender terms, the death of that wife and his return to Scotland and subsequent marriage to his first love and the birth of his second daughter). This is only one example of the subtle but dynamic relationships Cooper attempts to develop. In fact the movie, as good as it was, doesn't touch on this sub-story nor does it include the view of Magua's tribe, the Huron's as being mean and vicious to the core, which is and was at the time of the movie, not politically correct. A good read, but obviously dependent on one's expectations... in my opinion...