|
The Seventh Fire
Post-show Q&A with Winona Laduke, Friday, August 5 at 7:20pm
35th MSPIFF CLOSING PRESENTATION
Rob's 37-year story spans 39 foster homes, five trips to prison, and a near lifelong affiliation with the Native Gangster Disciples, a criminal gang that he has helped bring to Pine Point—also known as “P-Town”—a small Native village in northern Minnesota on the White Earth Indian Reservation. Rob is more than a gangster with a long rap sheet; he is also a loving father to his daughter Persephone, and a wickedly smart and sensitive writer who aspires to literary greatness. Late in the film, the solitude and sobriety of prison life lead to Rob's cultural awakening: he becomes the leader of the prison's Native Culture Group and begins writing a novel about his childhood, bringing a lyrical perspective to his painful and complicated story.
On the cusp of his eighteenth birthday, Kevin finds himself at a different sort of crossroads; he has the opportunity to reconnect with traditional Ojibwe ways, but continues to be pulled towards the criminal lifestyle of his mentor. Early one morning, Kevin’s father describes to his son the significance of their clan: “Wolf clan means that’s the animal we represent. Power. Intelligence. Endurance. A wolf can be passionate and it can be very destructive.”
At one point in the film we see Rob riding a motorcycle on the open road, a warrior choker necklace strapped proudly around his throat, knocking against the gang tattoo on his chest. At another moment we find Kevin trying tohonor both his tribe and his gang affiliation by getting a wolf clan tattoo of his own. Together the lives of Rob and Kevin present a devastating counter-myth to textbook notions of the American dream, and they force us to confront the modern-day ramifications of what are still the most overlooked aspects of American history.
PRESS
White House Screening and Panel Discussion
"A must see... stylistically polished, inquisitive and intimately reported." - The Star Tribune
"Important and fascinating." - The Hollywood Reporter
"An empathetic, often heartbreaking piece of work." - Time Out
"Bracingly candid in both tone and image." - CineVue
DIRECTOR BIOGRAPHY
Jack Pettibone Riccobono (Director, Producer, Writer, DP) has produced and directed a wide range of work across the five boroughs of his native New York City and around the world, from Moscow to Shanghai to Freetown. His narrative short Killer premiered at New Directors / New Films and won Best Short at the Nantucket Film Festival. His short documentary The Sacred Food, shot on the same reservation as The Seventh Fire, premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival. Jack received a Discovery Award from the Hollywood Film Festival for his directing work.
A graduate of Harvard’s VES Film Production Program and Werner Herzog’s Rogue Film School, his films have been screened at festivals around the world and at venues including DocumentaMadrid, the Museum of Modern Art,the Documentary and Experimental Film Centre in Tehran,the Museum of the American Indian, Lincoln Center, and the American University in Rome. In 2008, Jack launched the production company All Rites Reserved, dedicated to producing films with global reach that push visual and conceptual boundaries. The Seventh Fire is his first feature documentary.
NEW RELEASES
Extraordinary foreign films, must-see American indies, and groundbreaking documentaries from around the world, screening weekly at the Film Society.
Browse New Releases
|