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Smoke Signals
Year: 1998
Classification: Drama

Directed:

- Chris Eyre

Actors/Actresses:

- Adam Beach
- Evan Adams




reflect, remember and respect

Remember the old adage, "Growing up is hard to do?" Remember those words when you watch this movie. Two teens take on the road in the difficult task of retrieving the remains of ones father. They end up remembering life as they know it, reflecting on the past and learning from it, and come home as men. Not just age wise or anything like that, but real men. With hearts, minds, and "refreshed" spirits.BR>This movie will make you laugh your head off (if you've had your refresher course in American Indian Humor 101 then it's even funnier) and at the same time it will pull at your heart until you are fighting to understand these people and who they truly are.BR>I highly recommend it.BR>On the lighter side? I absolutely loved Thomas (Evan Adams). Pay close attention to the tales he tells. Kind of an American Indian Aesop. I just want to reach out and squeeze his beautiful self.BR>Victor (Adam Beach) is the macho man through the whole thing. The typically thought of stoic, serious indian. Oh, how wrong it is. Just wait 'til you see those pearly whites.BR>OH yeah! One more thing. In the end you get to meet grandma. Grandparents are a very important part of American Indian cultures. They are usually the ones who teach the children in the ways of right and wrong within most of our traditions. So when you hear Thomas talk about grandma, pay attention. You'll learn a little more about our peoples.BR>By the time all is said and done, you will find a new respect of teenagers, the American Indian peoples, and quite possibly for yourself, your family, and your loved ones.


great road trip movie!

One of the greatest underrated movies ever made!
Most of the emotional bite is taken from Sherman Alexie's "The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven" leaving a great yet simple story about two Indians (Alexie himself dislikes the label "Native American") on the road from the upper Northwest to Arizona. The mission: collect the remains of the father of Victor Joseph-- played with great complexity by Adam Beach. Along for the ride is Thomas, the local reservation geek who brings along with him a vast array of stories from the past mixed with humor and pain played with resilence by Evan Adams, to the constant annoyance of Victor who has no time for stories or memories, only "truth" and the present tense.
This movie is a series of vignettes as the two travel off the reservation ("You're leavin' the Rez and going into a whole different country cousin." "But it's the United States." "Damn right it is, that's as foreign as it gets!") and into the wilderness of forgotten memories and rough landscape. Mixed in with the ponderings of what it means to be indeginous in America and who makes the best fry-bread is a great soundtrack which includes Dar Williams and Ulali.
This movie does not try to be more than it is: the story of two young men trying to find their place in the world with humor and anger. Director Chris Eyre keeps the story and the settings simple and the flashbacks flow fluidly from one iteration to the next.
I would highly recommend this movie to anyone!


It's a Good Day to Be Indigenous....

I want to start out by saying Sherman Alexie is probably one of the greatest writers of our time. When I say "greatest writers" I don't mean "greatest NATIVE writers" or "greatest writers of COLOR," I mean Greatest Writers. Mr. Alexie manages to capture the most universal emotions (grief, joy, heartbreak, anguish) and make the excessible to all, yet he also brings his own unique flavor, style and ironic wit to the mix so we are never bored. I can honestly say that Smoke Signals is one of those films that is really dear to my heart for many reasons, and the screenplay by Alexie definitely is one of the contributing factors.
For starters, there are so many classic lines in this film. The first being that line I used as the subject for this review. "It is a good day to be Indigenous." I don't think we hear that everyday! The negative view of native people even today is really disturbing, and I think when people regardless of background see the portrayal of indigenous people in films, television shows, literature and education it continues to horrify and astound us all.
Secondly, the story is a wonderful and important one that I think everyone can relate to. It touches on the theme of fathers and the relationship with their children. Victor (Adam Beach) is an bitter, angry and distrustful young man who grew up on the Coeur D'Alene "Rez" with his bespectacled friend/nemesis Thomas Builds-the-Fire (Evan Adams). These young men are growing up in a culture separate from mainstream white culture--a culture they eventually leave when they go to retrieve the ashes of Victor's deceased father. What starts out as a road trip turns into something more significant than either of them could've imagined. It becomes ceremonial, and a real opportunity for maturity that changes their relationships with each other and themselves.
Finally, the acting is wonderful. The lead actors are engaging, believable and sympathetic. The supporting cast is strong and they really capture the essence of Alexie's novels. When I read TONTO AND LONE RANGER FISTFIGHT IN HEAVEN (specifically the short story, "This is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona," which the film was based on), the way I envisioned the characters (how they would look, how they would talk, etc) matched the image exactly!
Take it from me, a Sherman Alexie fan and self-proclaimed "culture vulture".....this film is all that and a stack of fry bread!






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