Archive for the NATIVE HOLLYWOOD Category

The Rhonda Rana Film, “Come and Get Your Love” won the Audience Favorite Award at the 2nd Annual Big Water Film Festival in Washburn, WI last week.

Nov 14th, 2009 Posted in NATIVE AMERICAN VIDEOS, NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Rhoda’s movie was filmed in many locations in the Twin Cities. The Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community was one of those places.  Our own Jim Anderson was one of the actors, with Mitch Walking Elk, Philip Little Thunder,  and other familiar faces. I watched many of the scenes and enjoyed it very much.

Congratulations to all of you who made the movie possible.

A very special congratulations to Rhonda.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNIE3NnpsHY .

Click here for a copy of the award.

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Dreamkeeper.

May 23rd, 2009 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | no comment »

Dreamkeeper is a wonderful movie. You and rent it or buy, it is a must see movie. It really makes you see what our people went through.

From the heart of a story came a young man’s journey to the soul.

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“Stop The Reroute: taking a stand on sacred land”

Feb 22nd, 2009 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Tickets can be purchased at NORTHERN SUN  2916 E lake St, Mpls MN. Tickets can be purchased at the door, the evening of the event.

www.northernsun.com

www.oakfolkfilms.net

Roosevelt High School Auditorium, Minneapolis, MN

4029 28th Ave. S, Minneapolis, MN 55406   Phone: 612-668-4800

Saturday  March 28, 2009

7:00 PM

Ticket price: $5

NEW YORK CITY SHOWING

7:00 PM

Bluestockings Bookstore

172 Allen St

New York,  New York

1-212-777-6028

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“Lost Sparrow” Premiere

Dec 16th, 2008 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD, STORIES, FOLKLORE & HISTORY | Comments Off

From: NAFM OFFICE [mailto:atoka1@cox.net]
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2008 2:06 PM
To: Georgia Wettlin-Larsen
Subject: “Lost Sparrow” Premiere

Georgia;

Received this in regard to an incident that had occurred recently.

r.c.

—————————-


Chris Billing

Director/Producer, Lost Sparrow

1933 S Street NW #E

Washington DC 20009

(202) 365-5231

The documentary Lost Sparrow will premier at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, UT on Friday, January 16 at 12:30 pm at the Treasure Mountain Inn’s Main Screening Room.  The film will also screen on January 20 at 3 pm in the Gallery Screening Room.

Lost Sparrow is the culmination of filmmaker Chris Billing’s two-year investigation into the tragic deaths of his two adopted Crow Indian brothers, Bobby and Tyler.  The probe uncovered dark family secrets, but also led to healing and redemption.  A brief synopsis is below.

Lost Sparrow features music by premier Native American flute player R. Carlos Nakai.  The film’s website is www.lostsparrowmovie.com.

Lost Sparrow synopsis

On June 26, 1978, two Crow Indian brothers ran away from home.  Early the next morning, they were struck and killed by a freight train.  Their mysterious and sudden deaths sent shockwaves through the tiny, upstate New York community of Little Falls.  No one could understand why Bobby, 13, and Tyler, 11, had run away from the white, Baptist family that seven years earlier had adopted them and their two biological sisters out of a troubled home on the Crow Reservation in Montana .

Their adoptive home – a vast 19th-century Victorian castle – seemed idyllic.  But the boys had discovered a dark secret.  They were killed as they tried to return to the reservation to get help for their sister Lana.

In the documentary film Lost Sparrow, filmmaker Chris Billing investigates the tragic deaths of his adopted brothers Bobby and Tyler, and confronts a painful truth that shattered his family.


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“Come and Get Your Love” A Film By Rhonda Rana

Oct 11th, 2008 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Come and Get Your Love” is a movie that was filmed here in the Twin Cities area in November, 05.  This is the first showing  this Sunday, October 12th at the Parkway Theater on Chicago Ave in So, Mpls. Show time is 2:15 P.M. and admission is $5.00.

The movie was filmed on location in Minneapolis, St. Paul and Mendota. The stars are  Marie Nordin, Jim Anderson, Mitch Walking Elk, Phillip Little Thunder, Lloyd Bald Eagle, Gen Huitt, Larry Yazzie, Bob Larsen, the Little Earth Drum and many more.

Movie goers will be thrilled with familiar scenes like the GAP School, the original Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community Center, the scenes that were filmed at the caves on Wabasha Street in St. Paul and of course all of the local personalities that they will see in the film

Please come and support our local talent.  Everyone on this film believed so strongly in this project that they gave their time and talent deferring any pay until the movie makes a profit.

The Parkway Theater has the best popcorn in town.

Some of us are meeting for lunch around 12:00 at Pepito’s Mexican Restaurant connected to the theater.

Hope to see you there!

(At the advice of Rhonda Rana, the movie’s writer, director and producer  “the show really isn’t for kids. It’s adult material, nothing bad, just some adult language and situations, kids probably wouldn’t be very entertained.”)

______________________________________________________________________

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Four Sheets to the Wind. -Walker Art Center

Jun 6th, 2008 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Thursday, July 10, 7:30 pm, Free, Walker Art Center, Mpls
Four Sheets to the Wind
Introduced by director by Sterlin Harjo
A coming-of-age drama set within the rhythms and landscapes of Oklahoma, Four Sheets to the Wind depicts a young man’s search for identity on the reservation and beyond. Featuring a performance of quiet intensity by Cody Lightning, son of Georgina Lightning (Older Than America, 2008 Women with Vision Film Festival), the film enacts a delicate balancing act between the pathos and humor inherent in this transitional community. A project of the Sundance Lab, this film went on to win a Special Jury Prize at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. 2007, 35mm, 91 minutes.Preceded by
Sikumi (On the Ice) [short film]
Introduced by director by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean
The first film ever made in the Iñupiaq language tells the story of an Inuit hunter who drives his dog team out on the frozen Arctic Ocean and inadvertently witnesses a murder. Winner of a 2008 Sundance Short Filmmaking Award, Sikumi was called by Film Threat “a work of great intelligence and artistry that demands to be seen by as many people as possible.” 2008, 35mm, 15 minutes.

This screening is co-presented with the Sundance Film Festival’s Native Initiative.

Rachel Lee Joyce
Assistant Director, Public Relations
Walker Art Center
612.375.7635
rachel.joyce@walkerart.org

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( Stop The ReRoute ) at Riverview Theater 5/22/08 at 7:pm. 38 and 42 Ave, Mpls

May 17th, 2008 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Riverview Flyer

(download as PDF file, need a PDF viewer? get it in our DOWNLOADS section)

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Origins of the Smoke Signal

Mar 8th, 2008 Posted in NATIVE HOLLYWOOD | Comments Off

Origins of the Smoke SignalBy Grandmother Selma

usaremington1.jpg

A gentle……almost magical…..puff of smoke rises up toward the clouds and heavens, floating, suspended in space, lifting then gradually disappearing, being consumed by the earth surrounding it and the breath of the wind that carries it.

An ancient skill of communication and survival, one that is simplistic in design, yet, universal versatility.   A skill of the Native American Indians, also of the ancient Chinese and presently used by the Boy Scouts of America.

The ” sending station” was a high location that would be visible from another high location.  The individual sender laid flammable material ( logs etc. ) on a fire bed that was of controlled size and design.   Many of these were referred to as ” fire bowls in earth Mother”.

For the most part the signals or code was pre-arranged between the sender and the receiver.  There was no universal code for shapes, frequency or multiples of puffs.

To have established a “set” series of signals equating to consistent meaning would have allowed enemies to ” read” the communication as well.

” Fire bowls”  have been located and studied on distinct hill tops and are saucer shaped depressions, round or square, five to eight feet across and lined with field stones.

The size, shape and depth of the ” fire bowl” was in direct relation to the amount and type of ” fuel” to burn to produce the needed smoke.

The stone lining aided in controlling the fire from escape and also provided ” props” or  “braces” which poles could be laid across with either skins or blankets attached, allowing for control and manipulation of the smoke to produce “puffs” of visible shape and size.

Some of these ” fire bowls”  or pits have been mapped and studied as they lay in close proximity to the ” Warrior Path” that ran between encampments of Shawnee near the Scioto River and Ohio River near Richmondale.  This ridge and ” path” of location ranges from elevations of six hundred and nine hundred feet.

In general Smoke Signals could signal danger, warning, call the people to a common meeting area, and transmitting  news.   Smoke could be made to curl in spirals, ascend in puffs or circles, even parallel lines.   Some signals resembled the letter V or Y and some were zigzag.  There were a few overall accepted meanings ….. as three puffs in rapid succession usually indicated danger.

Amongst the Apache, the sighting of one puff quickly losing its geometric shape indicated that a strange party had been spotted approaching.  If those ” puffs” were frequent and rapidly repeated, it transmitted the message that  ” the stranger approaching” was in fact many in number and armed.

The burning of wood has always been symbolic of transformation.  Changing one tangible form into another or others.  In this case usually wood being transformed to new elements, ash, lye, smoke, heat and water vapor.  Isn’t it somewhat amazing that indigenous peoples utilized one aspect of this transformation of the smoke to communicate amongst the people even over long distance?

When the sender ” released” the message the receiver would then often times, become the new sender to another receiver,  often many times over.

Therefore, in this fashion the information could be transmitted over vast geographic areas with accuracy.

Smoke Signals became Indian telegraphy.

Resource: Diary of A Visit of Inspection of the Texas Missions made by : Fray Gaspar Jose de Solis, year 1767-1768 translated by Margaret K. Kress with introduction by Mattie A. Hatcher, Southwestern Historical Quarterly. Vol.35.no.1., July 1931

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