Adam Sandler movie sparks debate over Native American images | Inquirer Entertainment

Adam Sandler movie sparks debate over Native American images

/ 01:15 PM April 25, 2015

Actor Adam Sander smiles during a news conference for "Men, Women, and Children" at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto in this 2014 file photo. A group of American Indian actors have walked off the set of an Adam Sandler movie production following complaints over stereotypes and offensive names. The Canadian Press/AP

Actor Adam Sander smiles during a news conference for “Men, Women, and Children” at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto in this 2014 file photo. A group of American Indian actors have walked off the set of an Adam Sandler movie production following complaints over stereotypes and offensive names. The Canadian Press/AP

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico—When a group of Native American actors walked off the set of an Adam Sandler movie this week, their decision generated praise and scorn on social media.

But everyone agreed on one thing: Despite growing awareness, outdated Native American stereotypes in Hollywood remain. And more Native Americans are voicing their opinions.

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This week, eight actors quit the production of the satirical Western “The Ridiculous Six” over complaints about offensive names and religious scenes. The actors said they couldn’t participate in a movie depicting a Native American woman urinating while smoking a peace pipe.

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California writer Megan Red Shirt-Shaw, founder of Natives in America, an online publication for Native American youth, said the walkout generated praise from American Indian advocates because people were tired of the images and now have outlets to express their outrage.

“In the past, Native actors did speak out but they didn’t have the technology to share their views widely,” Red Shirt-Shaw said. “It’s different now.”

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On social media, activists used the hashtag #NotYourHollywoodIndian to denounce Sandler’s project and to thank the actors for their “bravery.”

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Meanwhile, other Native Americans say more actors and writers are needed in media to battle hurtful images. They argued the actors should have stayed on set.

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The Sandler film is set for a Netflix-only release, and the streaming service says it was designed to lampoon stereotypes popularized in Western movies.

A spokesman for Sandler’s production company, Happy Madison Productions, didn’t immediately return a phone message.

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In recent years, Native Americans have been more outspoken.

For example, in 2013, some Native Americans were critical of Johnny Depp’s portrayal on Tonto in the Disney version adaptation of “The Lone Ranger.” Depp spoke in broken English, chanted prayers and wore a stuffed crow on his head. However, after a campaign by the movie to improve its image with Native Americans, Depp was eventually embraced on the Navajo Nation and was later adopted into the Comanche Nation.

A year before, the band No Doubt was forced to apologize and pull the music video “Looking Hot” after lead singer Gwen Stefani was criticized for dancing around teepees and wearing a series of Native American-styled outfits.

Elise Marubbio, an American Indian Studies professor at Augsburg College, said those stereotypes are part of the mythical American West narrative and usually center on images of the Lakota Sioux, the last tribe defeated by U.S. government forces.

But often those Lakota characters of the Great Plains are portrayed living in Monument Valley on the Navajo Nation of the American Southwest, Marubbio said.

That portrayal has changed little since the 1930s and seems to give some a justification to disrespectfully use Native American clothing and practices.

Goldie Tom, a female actor who walked off the Sandler production, said she knew the movie wasn’t going to be historically accurate, but she thought it would be tasteful.

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“I don’t regret my decision to be in the movie,” Tom said. “But after this experience, I’m reminded that we still have work to do.”

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