Smoke Signals
Rank
Top 20% of all time (see others with this rank)
Festival Year
1997 (click here to see all competition films from this year)
Category
Dramatic Competition
Cast
Adam Beach, Evan Adams, Gary Farmer, Tantoo Cardinal, Irene Bedard
Non-Cast Credits
Chris Eyre, Scott Rosenfelt, Larry Estes, David Skinner, Carl Bressier, Sherman Alexie, Brian Capener, Brian Berdan, Charles Armstrong, BC Smith
Description
Simply put, Chris Eyre's Smoke Signals is a superbly told, deeply moving portrait of coming to terms with one's father. His direction of novelist/screenwriter Sherman Alexie's tale of a young man's journey to retrieve his estranged father's body for burial is full of the kind of truth, spirit, and insight that only a remarkably original and genuine voice can offer.
The chronicle of athletic and charming Victor Joseph from the Salmon Indian Reservation really begins when he learns of his father's premature and sudden death. With no money, he accepts the offer of his quirky and garrulous childhood buddy, Thomas-Builds-the-Fire, to pay for the trip, but only if he goes along. Their ensuing odyssey becomes an exploration of social and personal being, but this is not atypical account laced with angst and despair. Eyre and Alexie have fused their cultural legacy with a cinematic vision that is fresh, honest, and deeply cynical of the trite images and ideas about what it is to be Indian in America.
Funny, raging, poignant, and revealing, Smoke Signals is a story told from a very personal point of view. As specific as it is, its payoffs are powerfully universal. Adam Beach heads a wonderful cast which includes Evan Adams as Thomas, and Gary Farmer and Tantoo Cardinal as Victor's parents. It is not novel enough to say that this is the first dramatic film directed and written by Native Americans. This film is blessed with
inspiration.
Reviewer
Geoffrey Gilmore (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)