Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Indian humor
From watching Sterlin's films, and other films by native people (Smoke Signals, Skins, Atanarjuat), I think the films' bouts of humor serve as a reality check--they serve to deflect stereotypes, and serve as reminders of the humanity and reality of the people they portray.
One night I heard Kinsey laughing uproariously in the other room. When I went to investigate it turned out she was watching this Youtube video:
"Sacred talk," shows a guy walking through the forest, talking in the stilted, spiritually-heavy manner of stereotypical Indians. His friends, just regular Indian guys messing around, think he's nuts as he loudly yammers on.
Kinsey and Chelsie (Creek) and I watched various videos by these guys over a few nights. The stereotypical Indian is always contrasted to modern, everyday Indians for hilarious results. These videos, along with Sterlin's films who have drawn such a following in the area, are perfect examples of Indian people using forms of modern media to show who they are. Sterlin and other Indian filmmakers are very important for determining how people view Indians, as many popular ideas of who Indians are have stemmed from years of romanticizations or misconceptions in movies. Now that Indian actors and filmmakers can control their own modes of media, they can start controlling how people perceive American Indians.
As we also stopped to look around in the Will Rogers museum and Will Rogers homestead, and saw how he kept Presidents like Silent Cal in line or Franklin Roosevelt in stitches, just with a few snappy remarks, we are reminded that Indian people are doing this today and have been doing it since the first films, in which Will Rogers was a star. The immensity of Will Rogers' stardom can't be underestimated, as we saw in the museum, supposedly the single biggest museum devoted to any one person. Satirists and huge public personalities like Will Rogers had and continue to have enormous influence on politics and popular opinion. Today that legacy is followed by Stephen Colbert, who is partly Chickasaw (and shares his last name with prominent Chicksaw Chief Levi Colbert).
They are also important for redefining who an Indian is in the eyes of others. Will Rogers showed that Indians weren't stereotypical; many are still surprised that he was Cherokee because he didn't "look" Indian, but his unique brand of Indian humor made him into the star and popular commentator that he was. For Will, being Indian was a state of mind, a wily eye on the world, keeping leaders in check, and giving an honest, humble voice.
Indian humor continues to be a powerful tool for Indian people to reach non-Indian people, continuing just as Will Rogers started when he began in the first silent films.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Post 6 - Doe Boy
I know I said that I couldnҀt stand ӀThe Doe BoyԀ but that wasnҀt meant in an ӀI hate itԀ way. It was meant in an ӀIҀm overwhelmedԀ way and my emotional bucket was at its rim and couldnҀt stand any more filling up. What an incredibly touching film and not just for Natives. Like Walker said about HarjoҀs ӀBarking WatersԀ, I would agree the same is true for Randy RedfordҀs ӀThe Doe Boy,Ԁ and I would suggest that there should be more films like them rather than the exception.
ӀThe Doe BoyԀ can be seen and probably in no other way as through a close-to-life lens. Its power lies in the fact that it really moved me. Most movies hide a lot or make a lot up for the benefit of entertainment, but I donҀt think its entertainment until some one is honestly moved or affected. This is what ӀThe Doe BoyԀ did for me. It was a film that let me realize how every other film IҀve watched up to this point was laced with an imagination that oftentimes makes its citizens live and believe in an alternate world and this canҀt be all that great supporting and influencing a society. This is because certain behaviors are based on misleading interpretations, almost on the fence of breeding immaturity.
For the character Hunter, he dealt with life and this is something hard to express in films because the entertainment value gets in the way. I am trying to say that a true sense of reality and life is seen through and understood by watching this movie. So someone who has been sheltered and living in an alternate reality is given a jolt to wake up.
Sometimes lower-budget films are great because they donҀt use made-up material. The directors are forced to use what is available and not what is made on a computer or with some other fashionable tool or decoration. Sometimes movies become so convoluted with the entertainment factor that they oftentimes shape a society in a negative way, kind of like the YouTube clips on Native American stereotypes in film that we watched. IҀm not saying that all movies should have that Ӏreal factorԀ that ӀThe Doe BoyԀ has; IҀm just suggesting that there should be more of them and I think Harjo and Redford are onto something.