Natives
From the Archives
•
03-Feb-2014
Jeremy Hersh's impressive short fresh out of NYU is remarkably mature & whip smart. Coming off a strong '13, featuring festival appearances at SXSW, Frameline, and Outfest, etc, the film is off to a running start online, recently selected to Vimeo Staff Picks & featured on Short of the Week. The gist: A Jewish woman, Rachel, and her Native American girlfriend, Anita, take a trip to visit Anita's estranged Native American parents...It's an uncomfortable reunion, exaggerated by the presence of Rachel, who desperately tries to make a speedy connection with the stoic parents. Toting her progressive upbringing + NPR knowledge, Rachel aims to soak up some real in-the-field cultural enrichment. Thing is, the parents seem uninterested in a cultural exchange, preoccupied with their daily patterns, perhaps partially in an effort to distract from what's "going on," namely that their closeted daughter is dating a woman, something their Seneca culture dismisses. The dynamic between Rachel and Anita is rendered with sharp insight. Rachel is dogged in her attempts to connect with Anita's parents. She spots a DVD of Lost, Anita's mother favorite show, and angles in: "Oh my god. We have to talk all about this. I'm addicted to it." Or suspends her vegetarianism to eat meat which she projects is traditionally prepared, "I can make an exception for something this special." The while, Anita becomes increasingly anxious about Rachel overstepping, "Are you seriously gonna tell me about my family based on what you have read in a feminist textbook?" And annoyed at Rachel's constant insistence that she tell the truth about their relationship. "It's not a closet thing. It's an Indian thing." Emily Young and Kendra Mylnechuk play the couple in spot-on performances. One of the more astute short films in recent memory, a rich & truthful psychological evaluation. -KA.
Up Next in From the Archives
-
Sad Kids
The only remaining episode of Sad Kidz TV, a Canadian after-school cartoon block with the fun-loving host Shane, exploring the deep melancholy it takes to be a kid. Directed by Alexander Laird and Alexander Swift, “Sad Kids,” mocks up a zany kids show, and it would be a near perfect replica if no...
-
Paradise
In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, two friends on a FaceTime call experience a dispute with a neighbor. Entirely presented as a video screen capture, Tanner Jarman’s film becomes an inadvertent tour through the racist viral videos of the day as we follow a young black man walking down the st...
-
The Loneliest Boy Band
Dusty Jacobson, a boy band obsessed grown man, tries to get a date online with someone named HungBrad. Directed by Natalie Fält, "The Loneliest Boy Band" has a light touch — mostly we’re just following Dusty as he talks about his love for The Backstreet Boys and dances in front of McDonalds— but ...