|
| |
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Based on a couple of short stories (from
The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven) by Sherman Alexie,
Smoke Signals is a lean and assured feature that speaks well of its lengthy,
rich evolution, including a development stint at Sundance. The first feature
made by a Native American crew and creative team, the film concerns two young
Idaho men with radically different memories of one Arnold Joseph (Gary Farmer),
a former resident of the reservation who split years before and has just died in
Phoenix. Arnold's strapping, popular son, Victor (Adam Beach), remembers him
best as an alcoholic, occasionally abusive father who drove off one day and
never came back. By contrast, Thomas Builds-the-Fire (Evan Adams), whom Arnold
had saved from certain death years earlier, has chosen to exaggerate the man's
life and deeds in a mythmaking fashion that drives Victor crazy. Circumstances
bring the two together, however, in a bus ride to retrieve Arnold's ashes.
There, in Phoenix, a confrontation with the reality of the dead man's fullest
legacy has a profound effect on both characters. Alexie, who wrote the script
and was personally involved in all aspects of the production, and first-time
director Chris Eyre are so polished in their approach that you can barely feel
the cinematic engine at work here. This is the kind of movie in which the
characters seem to be driving everything forward, a captivating and pleasant
experience that gets a little too tidy at the end (can we call a moratorium on
scenes of human ashes lovingly disposed to the winds?), but which is undeniably
moving. The cast, including Irene Bedard (the voice of and physical inspiration
for Disney's Pocahontas) is outstanding. --Tom Keogh
|