Through Navajo Eyes: The Intrepid Shadows (1966)
By Alfred Clah
Description exerpted from Through Navajo Eyes (271-2). “The film opens with a long series of shots showing the varieties of landscape around our schoolhouse. We see rocks, earth, trees, sky, in a variety of shapes but mostly in still or static shots. The shadows are very small or short. When we have familiarized ourselves with the things that comprise the “world” we see [Johnny Nelson] come walking into the landscape. He picks up a stick, kneels down, and begins to poke at a huge spider web.” “At this point the tone of the film changes. Suddenly a hand appears rolling an old metal hoop. The hoop is cut in intermittently throughout the rest of the film, rolling as if propelled by unseen hands through the variations in the landscape. A Yeibechai mask appears in the film at this point, wandering and walking through the landscape seemingly looking for something.” “The Yeibechai wanders behind trees, seen always through bushes, looking at the sky, looking in all directions, and is inter-cut in an extremely complex manner with continuing scenes of the landscape and of the legs and body of a person dressed in white.” “As the Yeibechai mask wanders, the camera work depicting the landsca…
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