‘Reservation Dogs’ Is a Slice-of-Life Triumph From Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi: TV Review

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Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi's ReservationDogs, set in and shot in Oklahoma with a cast, set of directors and writers’ room made up entirely of Indigenous people, lets us into a world television too rarely goes.

.” The series, set in and shot in Oklahoma with a cast, set of directors and writers’ room made up entirely of Indigenous people, lets us into a world television too rarely goes. The title reservation, a rural place where the only fun is what one makes for oneself, is a place our characters are keen to escape. But it’s also a community where the incidental magic of connection lies around every corner.

Co-created by Sterlin Harjo, a filmmaker who is a member of the Seminole Nation, and Taika Waititi, the Oscar-winning writer-director, the series follows a quartet that used to number five. The show’s central characters are missing Daniel, their friend who died a year prior; their sense of the area in which they live as uniquely bleak colors their mourning, and makes them motivated to find a way to travel west to California.

This is a creatively shot bit of wit from a show that — despite the presence of Waititi, whose try-everything sensibility can sometimes overwhelm elsewhere — tends to find its flourishes in human behavior. Bear and his three friends face that tug-of-war within every day. History and legacy tells them to be proud, bold, to respect themselves and their community — but that history seems distant given the American tendency to neglect and isolate its Native communities.

The rough willingness to tangle for one another cuts across gender — Jacobs’ Elora and Alexis’ Willie are every bit as involved in the cut-and-thrust of small-time scheming as their male counterparts. Indeed, the group seems to be living out a sort of extended childhood, where the reaction to privation and loss of all kinds is to find a way to make it a game.

But those encounters, too, bring a sense of sorrowful wisdom creeping in around the corners: The adults in Bear and his friends’ lives want to help them stay optimistic and curious and fresh, but also know that the reservation creates its own gravity.

 

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YuriLowenthal Sooo... we calling this 'Rez dogs' on the streets, right?

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