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Native American Films

In honor of November being Native American Heritage Month, we've put together a list of films celebrating American Indian culture.

1952  
 
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Some sources have indicated that Battles of Chief Pontiac was originally intended as the pilot for a TV series. Erstwhile Tarzan Lex Barker stars as 18th-century frontiersman Kent McIntyre, while Lon Chaney Jr. essays the title role of Chief Pontiac. On behalf of the British, McIntyre tries to negotiate a peace treaty with Pontiac, who is understandably wary of white-man promises. Sure enough, a fierce anti-Indian policy is placed into effect when McIntyre's commanding officer is replaced by bigoted Hessian colonel Von Weber (played with Fuehrer-like intensity by Berry Kroeger). Practicing a particularly insidious form of genocide, Von Weber tries to decimate the Indians with smallpox-infested blankets. Eventually, the cruel commandant is hoist on his own petard, and peace is restored for awhile. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Lex BarkerHelen Westcott, (more)
 
1920  
 
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Maurice Tourneur was the original director on the 1920 silent version of James Fenimore Cooper's Last of the Mohicans, but he fell ill during production, obliging his talented assistant Clarence Brown to finish the job. Though contractually Tourneur could have taken full credit for the finished film, he generously shared that credit with Brown, permitting the younger man to take top billing. The story is taken virtually verbatim from the Cooper original: During the Canadian wars between the French and the English in the 18th century, Huron Indian Magua (Wallace Beery) casts his lot with the French, while Mohicans Uncas (Albert Roscoe) and Chingachgook (Tod Lorch) are loyal to the English. The film's action highlight is the massacre of Fort Henry (we are spared nothing, not even the bayonetting of babies), but its emotional peak occurs when Cora Munro (Barbara Bedford), daughter of the Fort Henry commander, threatens to fling herself off a high cliff rather than fall into the hands of the lecherous Magua. Uncas, who loves Cora from afar, is too late to effect a rescue, and the sense of genuine loss pervades the thrill-packed climax, injecting a strong sense of humanity into what otherwise might have been a straightforward adventure tale. Both the 1936 and 1990 remakes of Last of the Mohicans owe a great deal to this impressive silent version. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Wallace BeeryBarbara Bedford, (more)
 
 
 
Add Exploring Our Past: Native Peoples of the Northwest to Queue Add Exploring Our Past: Native Peoples of the Northwest to top of Queue  
This comprehensive overview of the Native American experience in the Northwestern United States offers a variety of educational activities designed to provide students with a better understanding of a culture and way of life far removed from modern society. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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NR  
Add Jamake Highwater Collection: Primal Mind/Native Land to Queue Add Jamake Highwater Collection: Primal Mind/Native Land to top of Queue  
Jamake Highwater is a writer who has studied mythology and Native American culture. This disc offers a pair of documentaries that have Highwater exploring different aspects of these topics. The DVD contains a standard full-frame transfer. The English soundtrack is rendered in Dolby Digital Stereo. There are neither subtitles nor closed-captions on this release. Supplemental materials include weblinks. It is a shame that additional information was not put on this disc, but it should be of interest to anyone curious about the subject matter. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

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The documentary Afroamerindios posits the theory that two deep-seated modes of perception existed - and came into trenchant conflict - at the time of the Pilgrims' arrival in the New World and their initial encounters with Native Americans. One "mode" - that of the indigenous tribes - involved nature and spiritual ideas, many tied inherently to animism; the other "mode" - that of the Europeans - rested squarely on a base of rational thought and reasoning. Afroamerindios both explores the former and pays tribute to its celebrators, thus contributing to the preservation of Native American cultural tropes and ideas. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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NR  
Add 500 Nations [4 Discs] to Queue Add 500 Nations [4 Discs] to top of Queue  
This documentary series on Native American history and culture has been given a respectful presentation for its release on DVD. 500 Nations has been transferred to disc in the full-frame aspect ratio of 1.33:1, while the audio has been mastered in Dolby Digital Stereo. The narration and interviews are in English, with optional subtitles in English, French, and Spanish. Bonus materials include an introduction and afterword from Kevin Costner, thoughts on the use of CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) in the series from director Jack Leustig, and a bonus CD-ROM disc featuring archival material and details on the production of the series. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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