Native Actors Walk off Set of Adam Sandler Movie

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Native Actors Walk off Set of Adam Sandler Movie

Native Actors Walk off Set of Adam Sandler Movie After Insults to Women, Elders

Approximately a dozen Native actors and actresses, as well as the Native cultural advisor, left the set of Adam Sandler’s newest film production, The Ridiculous Six, on Wednesday. The actors, who were primarily from the Navajo nation, left the set after the satirical western’s script repeatedly insulted native women and elders and grossly misrepresented Apache culture.

The examples of disrespect included Native women’s names such as Beaver’s Breath and No Bra, an actress portraying an Apache woman squatting and urinating while smoking a peace pipe, and feathers inappropriately positioned on a teepee.

The film, which is said to be a spoof of The Magnificent Seven and was written by Adam Sandler and his frequent collaborator Tim Herlihy, is currently under production by Happy Madison Productions for a Netflix-only release. The movie will star Adam Sandler, Nick Nolte, Steve Buscemi, Dan Aykroyd, Jon Lovitz and Vanilla Ice.

Among the actors who walked off the set were Navajo Nation tribal members Loren Anthony, who is also the lead singer of the metal band Bloodline, and film student Allison Young. Anthony says that though he understands the movie is a comedy, the portrayal of the Apache was severely negligent and the insults to women were more than enough reason to walk off the set.

“There were about a dozen of us who walked off the set,” said Anthony, who told ICTMN he had initially refused to do the movie. He then agreed to take the job when producers informed him they had hired a cultural consultant and efforts would be made for tasteful representation of Natives.

“I was asked a long time ago to do some work on this and I wasn't down for it. Then they told me it was going to be a comedy, but it would not be racist. So I agreed to it but on Monday things started getting weird on the set,” he said.

Anthony says he was first insulted that the movie costumes that were supposed to portray Apache were significantly incorrect and that the jokes seemed to get progressively worse.

"We were supposed to be Apache, but it was really stereotypical and we did not look Apache at all. We looked more like Comanche," he said. "One thing that really offended a lot of people was that there was a female character called Beaver's breath. One character says 'Hey, Beaver's Breath.' And the Native woman says, 'How did you know my name?'"

“They just treated us as if we should just be on the side. When we did speak with the main director, he was trying to say the disrespect was not intentional and this was a comedy.”

"The producers just told us, 'If you guys are so sensitive, you should leave.'" —Alison Young

Allison Young, Navajo, a former film student from Dartmouth, was also offended by the stereotypes portrayed and the outright disrespect paid to her and others by the director and producers.

"When I began doing this film, I had an uneasy feeling inside of me and I felt so conflicted," she said. "I talked to a former instructor at Dartmouth and he told me to take this as finally experiencing stereotyping first hand. We talked to the producers about our concerns. They just told us, 'If you guys are so sensitive, you should leave.' I was just standing there and got emotional and teary-eyed. I didn’t want to cry but the feeling just came over me. This is supposed to be a comedy that makes you laugh. A film like this should not make someone feel this way.”

“Nothing has changed,” said Young. “We are still just Hollywood Indians.”

Goldie Tom also shared her frustrations with ICTMN. "I felt this was all really disrespectful," she said. "Our costumes did not portray Apache people. The consultant, Bruce spoke to the crew and told them we should not have braids and chokers and he was very disappointed. He asked to speak with Adam Sandler. We talked to the producers about other things in the script and they said 'It's in the script and we are not going to change it.' Overall, we were just treated disrespectfully, the spoke down to us and treated everyone with strong tones.”

74-year old David Hill, Choctaw, a member of the American Indian Movement, also left the set. "They were being disrespectful," he said. "They were bringing up those same old arguments that Dan Snyder uses in defending the Redskins. But let me tell you, our dignity is not for sale. It is a real shame because a lot of people probably stay because they need a job.”

Hill also mentioned that the producers called back the consultant as well as other native actors to their departure from the set on Wednesday.

“I hope they will listen to us," Hill said. "We understand this is a comedy, we understand this is humor, but we won’t tolerate disrespect. I told the director if he had talked to a native woman the way they were talked to in this movie—I said I would knock his ass out.”

“This isn’t my first rodeo, if someone doesn’t speak up, no one will.”

Neither Adam Sandler nor anyone for Happy Madison Productions responded to our attempts in reaching out to them for comment.

TL-DR version:

Movie with Native Americans and lots of jokes at Native American's expense hires Native American advisor and actors. When advisor actually gives them advise and actors say stuff is offensive, they get brushed off because 'it's a comedy,' and finally walk.

What did they expect from an Adam Sandler movie?

So let me get this straight...

They were completely unaware of the script/themes/setting and were offended by the content of the movie before they signed on/signed a contract/started acting in the film?

Sounds like a ploy, to me. Anyone with even a little bit of knowledge on how an actor gets a job in a movie knows that this is just an attention-ploy.

Sorry, not buying this politically correct bullshit.

"I'm soooo offended about a movie I signed up for, have a contract on, and was participating acting in, and was blind-sided by completely out-of-nowhere racism!" GTFO 😬

“There were about a dozen of us who walked off the set,” said Anthony, who told ICTMN he had initially refused to do the movie. He then agreed to take the job when producers informed him they had hired a cultural consultant and efforts would be made for tasteful representation of Natives.

“I was asked a long time ago to do some work on this and I wasn't down for it. Then they told me it was going to be a comedy, but it would not be racist. So I agreed to it but on Monday things started getting weird on the set,” he said.

Originally posted by dadudemon
So let me get this straight...

They were completely unaware of the script/themes/setting and were offended by the content of the movie before they signed on/signed a contract/started acting in the film?

Sounds like a ploy, to me. Anyone with even a little bit of knowledge on how an actor gets a job in a movie knows that this is just an attention-ploy.

...

They hired a cultural advisor specifically to, supposedly, not offend people. They hired the actors reassuring them that they'd have a cultural advisor and be sensitive.

They then proceeded to ignore everything those people said, so they walked.

So, you're pretty much misrepresenting things 180 there. It seems more like the production company hired the cultural advisor just to rubber stamp whatever they were doing, without actually telling the cultural advisor or the actors that that's what they were doing.

You know, like how bad-science movies hire 'NASA science advisors' and advertise that, while actually just doing whatever crap science they want? Like that, except with not being a bigot.


Sorry, not buying this politically correct bullshit.

Sorry, not buying your anti-politically correct kneejerk bs. It doesn't fit the facts.

i'm not watching this crap anyway

Originally posted by FinalAnswer
Did you expect him to read the OP?

Stop trolling. 😬

I must wonder at which point they read the script, or were they just background characters? I can't imagine the leader of a rock band wanting such a small role, and if he wanted a large role he would have read the script and either demanded rewrites before signing or not done the film to begin with. If he signed without reading the script, he's stupid and if he knew about the offensiveness and still signed and chose to walk off now he's either a weak coward or an attention whore.

Originally posted by BruceSkywalker
i'm not watching this crap anyway

Originally posted by Lestov16
I must wonder at which point they read the script, or were they just background characters? I can't imagine the leader of a rock band wanting such a small role, and if he wanted a large role he would have read the script and either demanded rewrites before signing or not done the film to begin with. If he signed without reading the script, he's stupid and if he knew about the offensiveness and still signed and chose to walk off now he's either a weak coward or an attention whore.
He's the frontman of a little garage metal band, not the frontman of Metallica. I couldn't actually find a song by them in youtube, and was too lazy to search elsewhere. He's not some big shot.

Also, why do you think a bunch of extras were given the full script upfront?

Furthermore, some of the aspects they took offense to, like the fake native costumes and props, or them outright ignoring the cultural consultant during filming, wouldn't be in the script.

You should probably read the full OP. He was assured that there would be a cultural consultant and that they would take pains to not be offensive. Only to be told to gtfo if he had a problem, lol.

The only real sign that he's up to no good is a tweet earlier where he said he was having a great time, though that might have been before shit got too much for him.

Originally posted by NemeBro
You should probably read the full OP. He was assured that there would be a cultural consultant and that they would take pains to not be offensive. Only to be told to gtfo if he had a problem, lol.

The only real sign that he's up to no good is a tweet earlier where he said he was having a great time, though that might have been before shit got too much for him.

And heck, he's just one of the actors, when dozens walked including the cultural consultant.

Who was being ignored on simple stuff like 'blatantly the wrong culture.'

So people aren't just walking out of theatres whenever his movies are on but now they're actually walking off set

Originally posted by steverules_2
So people aren't just walking out of theatres whenever his movies are on but now they're actually walking off set

😂

Originally posted by steverules_2
So people aren't just walking out of theatres whenever his movies are on but now they're actually walking off set
This is funnier than any movie he has made in decades.

They complain about being stereotyped in the script but then say it makes them look like comanches? ...lol

Originally posted by Q99
The examples of disrespect included Native women’s names such as Beaver’s Breath and No Bra, an actress portraying an Apache woman squatting and urinating while smoking a peace pipe
👆 sounds good

Sandler should walk off the set, forever.

Originally posted by Q99
...

They hired a cultural advisor specifically to, supposedly, not offend people. They hired the actors reassuring them that they'd have a cultural advisor and be sensitive.

You're taking quite a bit of liberty on your interpretation, here.

Originally posted by Q99
They then proceeded to ignore everything those people said, so they walked.

And you invented this part. Like...literally made up a statement that you'd like to present as fact to support your position.

Originally posted by Q99
So, you're pretty much misrepresenting things 180 there. It seems more like the production company hired the cultural advisor just to rubber stamp whatever they were doing, without actually telling the cultural advisor or the actors that that's what they were doing.

You know, like how bad-science movies hire 'NASA science advisors' and advertise that, while actually just doing whatever crap science they want? Like that, except with not being a bigot.

No, what happened was, some people signed up for a movie that they knew exactly what it was about. Seems like they did so specifically to make a point about it being offensive. That's pretty obvious. It is highly unlikely that they did not read the script. It is also highly unlikely all of them were without agents. It is also extremely unlikely that those agents did not look over the scripts themselves and get an idea of what they were getting their clients into.

Those are the points you're glossing over which completely makes everything you're stating/concerned about seem irrelevant.

How many people sign up for a film with the expectation of changing the basic presentation? "I'll go ahead and sign up for this film but I'm changing the shit out of it because I don't like it."

Edward Norton? lol

Originally posted by Q99
Sorry, not buying your anti-politically correct kneejerk bs. It doesn't fit the facts.

Sorry, I don't believe you're taking a hard-line stance with bent facts. I think you actually agree with me on this but hate to admit that my point is pretty dang good. It's cognitive dissonance that you're experiencing right now. No worries...let it sink in. Admit that this was just another "politically correct" ploy by some people looking to make a statement. Social Justice Warriors is what they are called. It takes quite a bit of suspension of disbelief to believe these was just an innocent situation where actors were blind-sided and offended by some parts they haphazardly took on a film.

Originally posted by Mindset
Did you expect him to read the OP?

Stop trolling. 😬

But, I did. And I read another news article, using Google search, to see if there was more/better information.

If the quote is true, a certain set of standards were promised to this individual before he agreed to participate, these standards weren't upheld.

I'm not sure on the process of how much information they are given about the movie in its entirety, or how much of the complete script they are able to see at all stages of filming; but this information becomes slightly irrelevant when you have producers, like I mentioned earlier, making promises of accommodation in regards to the actors misgivings about potential offensive content.

If anything, it's likely that the producers said anything they could to get this movie rolling and hoped the actors would just stay onboard when they found out they were lied to.

Originally posted by Mindset
If the quote is true, a certain set of standards were promised to this individual before he agreed to participate, these standards weren't upheld.

If this is the argument from either side, either side's argument is too arbitrary.

"We upheld our commitment to providing tasteful changes."

"We did not feel there were enough changes."

Cool. Both arguments are arbitrary. Useless.

Yea, I'm having a hard time believing producers would make any significant changes to please unknown actors in minor roles.

Didn't you just post how it's unreasonable for them to think they would?

It's like me promising if you bought a new car I'd help you pay for it, then I gave you 1 dollar toward the payment.

"Wtf, man, I fulfilled my promise!"