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WATERBUSTER Now Showing at:

PREVIOUS SHOWINGS

White River Indie Films, White River Junction, VT

Fargo Film Festival, Fargo, ND
WINNER, BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE, Native American Voices

15th Annual Environmental Film Festival, Washington D.C. @ NMAI on the Mall

Winnipeg Aboriginal Film & Video Festival, Winnipeg, Canada
NOMINEE FOR BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

31st Annual American Indian Film Festival, San Fracisco, CA
NOMINEE FOR BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

13th Native American Film + Video Festival, NMAI, New York, NY

Heard Museum Film Festival
Phoenix, AZ

New Hampshire Film Expo
Porstmouth, NH

Vermont International Film Festival, Burlington, VT

Native Cinema Showcase
Santa Fe Indian Market, Santa Fe, NM

“A lyrical, haunting account of loss of community and cultural identity...vividly reimagines the fabled towns and rich bottomland from which the North Dakota Indians were evicted by the damming of the Missouri River.”

-Ronnie Scheib, VARIETY

“Deeply personal and made with passion and tenderness, this gem reveals incredible, little known history, past and present, that, amazingly, both breaks your heart and raises your spirits...It’s a documentary every American should see. ”

-Danny Peary, FilmInk


Synopsis of the film
WATERBUSTER

Documentary filmmaker J. Carlos Peinado embarks on a journey of self-discovery to his ancestral homeland in North Dakota. Living on a sailboat in California, he discovers he has become separated from his family home, his community and his American Indian identity. Having traveled through many worlds, far from the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, the filmmaker realizes he cannot choose the shape of his future until he understands and embraces the shape of his past. Tracing the footsteps of his maternal grandmother Elizabeth back to the reservation he encounters a multi-generational cast of characters. Through interviews with them he begins to understand the proud and resilient nature of his tribe, the Mandan-Hidatsa-Arikara Nation, their contributions to American culture and history, and their deep attachment to the harsh and storied landscape of the northwestern prairie—an attachment that has often come with a heavy price.

He encounters the mournful optimism of his grandmother’s generation and learns more about the events of the 1940’s and 1950’s that impacted their lives: the building of the Army Corps of Engineers’ Garrison Dam that inundated a 156,000 fertile farming and ranching acres along the reservation’s Missouri River bottomlands, and the attempt by the federal government to eliminate sovereign Indian nations through a policy of termination and relocation.

Throughout, he begins to connect with his family and community, and discovers that irony abounds on the northern plains: the Garrison Dam reservoir—named Lake Sakagawea after the young woman who aided Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery—is drying up. Ultimately this story is a confrontation with identity, a bi-cultural, hybrid identity of Indian and non-Indian, highlighting the universal struggle we all have in 21st century America to find a sense of place, a community and a home.

Copyright 2006, Brave Boat Films, Inc.