Logo What's After the Movie

The Cherokee Kid 1996

In the harsh frontier, only the hard, tough, or insane survived—Isaiah Turner embodied all three. Orphaned after the wealthy, powerful Cyrus Bloomington brutally murdered his parents, he shuns heroics and fixates on vengeance. Through dusty towns and lawless trails he tracks Bloomington, determined to bring the tyrant to justice.

In the harsh frontier, only the hard, tough, or insane survived—Isaiah Turner embodied all three. Orphaned after the wealthy, powerful Cyrus Bloomington brutally murdered his parents, he shuns heroics and fixates on vengeance. Through dusty towns and lawless trails he tracks Bloomington, determined to bring the tyrant to justice.

Does The Cherokee Kid have end credit scenes?

No!

The Cherokee Kid does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Meet the Full Cast and Actors of The Cherokee Kid

Explore the complete cast of The Cherokee Kid, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.


Take the Ultimate The Cherokee Kid Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of The Cherokee Kid with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


The Cherokee Kid Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 1996 western adventure film *The Cherokee Kid* with these ten multiple‑choice questions ranging from easy to hard.

Which actor portrays Isaiah Turner, also known as the Cherokee Kid?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for The Cherokee Kid

See more

Read the complete plot summary of The Cherokee Kid, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Isaiah Turner Sinbad, known as “The Cherokee Kid,” steps into a storied myth of danger and justice when he confronts The Undertaker Gregory Hines in a tense duel in Larabee, Texas. The clash ends as if Isaiah has fallen, a victory that pleases land-grabber Bloomington James Coburn and sets the stage for a deeper reckoning. At the funeral, the eulogy delivered by A Martinez as Juan Cortina pulls back the curtain on a brutal, years-spanning backstory that ties Isaiah to land, legacy, and bloodlines.

The film’s prologue unfurls in Oklahoma Territory amid the era of railroads and expansion. Isaiah’s half-Cherokee father refuses to sell their land, a decision that proves fatal when the railroad man behind the scheme is murdered. In the ensuing days, Isaiah and his brother Jedediah Turner take matters into their own hands, orchestrating revenge for their family. Their mother’s stern warning—that they might be confusing stupidity with courage—lands like a mantra in their minds as their father’s Cherokee-feathered hat is placed on Jedediah’s head, an emblem that signals a boyhood rite of passage. The moment is interrupted violently when Bloomington himself appears, killing their mother and leaving a lasting scar on Isaiah’s memory. Isaiah escapes, while Jedediah is whisked away to safety by a family that will shape their futures.

Fourteen years drift by in a haze of hard-won experience and rough justice. Isaiah spots a poster advertising Bloomington’s gubernatorial campaign and sets out to derail the man who broke his family. A comic misstep—getting lost on the way—mixes with a brutal accident: Isaiah inadvertently kills the outlaw Jake Carver with a turkey while trying to rescue a vulnerable woman. Carver’s gang quickly closes in, and Isaiah, pretending to be Carver’s ally planning a bank job, coerces them into ferrying him to Pinedale. The misdirection buys him time but also deepens the peril surrounding his mission.

In Pinedale, a bungled robbery and a failed assassination push Isaiah toward a pivotal alliance. He hides with Otter Bob—the mountain man played by Burt Reynolds—and for three months learns the hard-earned skills of survival and sharpshooting in exchange for Isaiah’s growing literacy lessons. When Bonner’s men close in, Otter Bob makes the ultimate sacrifice to protect Isaiah, a moment that cements the fierce bond between mentor and student. After this act of loyalty, Isaiah crosses paths with Juan Cortina again, this time in need of aid in the desert, and Cortina vows to repay the debt.

In El Paso, Isaiah’s path crosses with Nat Love, a legendary gunslinger known as Deadwood Dick Ernie Hudson. The two men are jailed together, and Nat’s warning about Jedediah Turner—now a gunslinger who dies in a duel with The Undertaker—adds gravity to Isaiah’s quest. Cortina helps break them out, and soon they join Nat’s gang, a cadre that includes the enigmatic Stagecoach Mary Dawnn Lewis. Under Nat’s demanding tutelage, Isaiah becomes a formidable marksman and earns the moniker “Cherokee Kid.” A successful bank job shapes his reputation, but after the heist, Cortina and Isaiah begin to diverge from the gang’s orbit.

The hunt for Bloomington intensifies as the Cherokee Kid aims at the financier’s banks. Bloomington swings back with a cadre of bounty hunters, including The Undertaker, who is revealed to be Jedediah Turner—the brother Isaiah believed gone forever. The pair’s epic confrontation looms as they seek fresh horses at the Holsopple farm, where Abby Holsopple Vanessa Bell Calloway volunteers to aid the bounty hunters, only to be pulled into the maelstrom after a clash that leaves the farm’s defenses in question. The escape becomes a test of loyalties, and Isaiah’s resolve hardens as he accepts the duel that will determine Bloomington’s fate.

What follows is a monumental showdown that reshapes the brothers’ destinies. The staged duel gives Isaiah a chance to “rise from the dead” and strike at Bloomington’s forces, sending a wildfire of gunfire across the landscape. Nat Love dies in the crossfire, Cortina is wounded, and the battle leaves Bloomington’s grip reeling. The two Turner brothers—Isaiah and Jedediah—reunite in a way that restores a fragile balance between family loyalty and the price of revenge. In a tense moment of reckoning, Isaiah corners Bloomington in a barn, refuses any partnership that would betray his own code, and ends Bloomington’s threat with cold resolve as Jedediah saves Isaiah from a final ambush. The two brothers stand side by side, a fractured but unbroken alliance.

In the wake of Nat’s burial, Isaiah and Jedediah consider a westward life that promises new adventures and a chance to outrun the violence of the past. Cortina lingers as a tether to their debt and a reminder of the prices paid for those bonds. Abby’s defiant plea—whether she can join their ranks or simply remain close enough to change the future—echoes through the scene as she fires a last shot, insisting on a place among the men who ride toward tomorrow. The myth of the Cherokee Kid ends not with a single act of vengeance but with a choice: to outrun the old violence or to redefine it, to let the land heal through a partnership built on respect rather than conquest, and to find a home where kinship can finally outstrip the hunger for retribution.

In the end, the story centers on courage, lineage, and the stubborn pursuit of justice in a land that is as unforgiving as it is vast. Isaiah’s arc—from a vengeful youth to a seasoned gunslinger bound to a new compass of loyalty—plays out against the harsh, sweeping backdrop of the American frontier. The film weaves together action, humor, and tragedy, balancing the blunt force of gunplay with the quieter, more intimate moments of reading, learning, and rebuilding trust. If The Cherokee Kid’s legend persists, it is because the tale asks us to measure courage not by how loudly a man acts, but by how steadfastly he chooses the path of responsibility after the gun has spoken.

Uncover the Details: Timeline, Characters, Themes, and Beyond!

Mobile App Preview

Coming soon on iOS and Android

The Plot Explained Mobile App

From blockbusters to hidden gems — dive into movie stories anytime, anywhere. Save your favorites, discover plots faster, and never miss a twist again.

Sign up to be the first to know when we launch. Your email stays private — always.

Watch Trailers, Clips & Behind-the-Scenes for The Cherokee Kid

See more

Watch official trailers, exclusive clips, cast interviews, and behind-the-scenes footage from The Cherokee Kid. Dive deeper into the making of the film, its standout moments, and key production insights.


Trailer de "Cherokee Kid- Promessa de Vingança"

The Cherokee Kid Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


land grabmurdergunfighterrevengebank robberybanditoutlawfriendmurdererprisonstreet shootout
Movie Wiki CTA - Movie Book

Unlock the World of Movies with Our Comprehensive Wiki

Dive into our Movie Wiki for in-depth film encyclopedia entries, including cast biographies, production trivia, plot synopses, behind-the-scenes facts, and thematic analyses. Whether you’re researching iconic directors, exploring genre histories, or discovering hidden easter eggs, our expertly curated movie database has everything you need to fuel your cinematic passion.

Movie Wiki CTA - Green Blue Wave

Similar Movies To The Cherokee Kid You Should Know About

Browse a curated list of movies similar in genre, tone, characters, or story structure. Discover new titles like the one you're watching, perfect for fans of related plots, vibes, or cinematic styles.


© 2025 What's After the Movie. All rights reserved.