Native American characters have been the most malleable of
metaphors for filmmakers. The likeable Doc of Stagecoach (1939) had
audiences on the edge of their seats with dire warnings about “that
old butcher, Geronimo.” Old Lodgeskins of Little Big Man (1970) had
viewers crying out against the demise of the noble, wise chief and
his kind and simple people. In 1995 Disney created a beautiful,
peace-loving ecologist and called her Pocahontas. Only occasionally
have Native Americans been portrayed as complex, modern characters
in films like Smoke Signals. Celluloid Indians is an
accessible, insightful overview of Native American representation
in film over the past century. Beginning with the birth of the
movie industry, Jacquelyn Kilpatrick carefully traces changes in
the cinematic depictions of Native peoples and identifies cultural
and historical reasons for those changes. In the late twentieth
century, Native Americans have been increasingly involved with
writing and directing movies about themselves, and Kilpatrick
places appropriate emphasis on the impact that Native American
screenwriters and filmmakers have had on the industry. Celluloid
Indians concludes with a valuable, in-depth look at influential and
innovative Native Americans in today’s film industry.