トップ > ニュース一覧 > 記事
‘Free Leonard Peltier’ Follows A 50-Year Trail To Justice For Native American Icon – Thessaloniki Int’l Documentary Festivalン

‘Free Leonard Peltier’ Follows A 50-Year Trail To Justice For Native American Icon – Thessaloniki Int’l Documentary Festival

It’s an elusive dream for so many docmakers: to impact legislation, to find justice, to make a difference. To change the world. With Free Leonard Peltier, filmmakers Jesse Short Bull (Lakota Nation vs. United States) and David France (How To Survive a Plague) achieved their eponymous goal: Seven days before the world premiere of their film at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival in January, President Joe Biden, in his last act before leaving office, issued a clemency order, commuting Peltier’s sentence to home confinement.

The Native American activist had served nearly 50 years in a federal prison, having been convicted of murder of two FBI agents in a shootout at the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota in 1975. Peltier’s attorneys and supporters would wage a decades-long battle through appeals, writs and petitions to circuit courts, federal courts, the U.S. Supreme Court and three U.S. presidents, alleging numerous incidents of misconduct by the FBI in Peltier’s case. His cause became a global cause célèbre, attracting the support of Nobel Laureates, scholars, artists, and civil rights leaders.

More from Deadline

'Free Leonard Peltier'
‘Free Leonard Peltier’

The Free Leonard Peltier team rushed back to the editing room to add this happy ending, working at a feverish pace to craft a new DCP for the January 27th premiere. Peltier was released on February 18 from a federal correctional facility in Florida to home confinement at the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota. The film screens Wednesday at the Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival after celebrating its international premiere at TiDF Tuesday night.

ADVERTISEMENT

While Jesse Short Bull and David France hadn’t worked together before, they both came to the project with a long history of activism–and a deep admiration for Peltier and his iconic stature. France was in the audience at a 2022 screening of Short Bull’s previous film, Lakota Nation vs. United States. Short Bull’s producers, Jody Archambault, Jane Myers and Bird Runningwater, made the introduction between the filmmakers.

(L-R) David France, Jesse Short Bull, Amber Morning Star Byars, Jhane Myers and Jodi Archambau attend the 'Free Leonard Peltier' premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival at Ray Theatre on January 27, 2025 in Park City, Utah.
PARK CITY, UTAH – JANUARY 27: (L-R) David France, Jesse Short Bull, Amber Morning Star Byars, Jhane Myers and Jodi Archambau attend the ‘Free Leonard Peltier’ premiere at Sundance

France has had a distinguished career as a journalist, activist and filmmaker, having focused primarily on the LGBTQ+ movement. He was very much aware of, and inspired by, the American Indian Movement (AIM) during its heyday in the 1970s. “The American Indian Movement was in my childhood, a very significant force, drove a lot of news coverage and animated a lot of people’s interest in justice,” France tells Deadline. “I saw it as a natural outgrowth of the kind of political activism that I’ve covered from the queer perspective, to see where those parallels were.”

Short Bull, a member of the Oglala Lakota Tribe, grew up in South Dakota, near the Pine Ridge Reservation. Over the past decade, he’s been active in his community, helping to provide support for Native college students and participating in filmmaking workshops. How did the two filmmakers complement each other? “My philosophy is, How can I best serve the story?” he says. “David had a pretty extensive background with Leonard’s story, and I didn’t have anywhere near that level of understanding of some of the events. However, I’m from Pine Ridge. I live here, in southwestern South Dakota. I’m active within my tribe. I’m really rooted here in the community. Once I started to familiarize myself with Leonard’s story, then it became whatever we can do to make it the most effective that we can. I became a servant to the story, in that sense.”

'Incident at Oglala' poster
'Incident at Oglala' poster

The story of AIM, Peltier and the conflicts at Pine Ridge have been the subject of several documentaries over the past few decades, including Michael Apted’s Incident at Oglala (1993) and Stanley Nelson and Julianna Brannum’’s Wounded Knee (2009). Much has come to light in the decades since those films, including, most recently, a letter from U.S. Attorney James H. Reynolds that sharply criticized Peltier’s trial and how federal authorities handled the case. “We wanted to use the advantage of having  hindsight, to be able to tell the full story,” says France. “We wanted to ask the question, Why did this happen? As far as our division of labor went, Jesse really led the research initiative to try to get to those answers. Jesse brought all of that to the interviewing; I was more involved in the shaping of the archive.”

ADVERTISEMENT

In a 2024 interview with Julianna Brannum in the Oklahoma-based publication Luxiere, Brannum points out that in making Wounded Knee, Nelson had admitted that he didn’t know much about Native history but as an African American, “he knew about generational trauma, and he understood that there are differences in trauma and how it affects different people.”

For France, generational trauma figured largely in joining the Free Leonard Peltier project. “At one of our meetings, I realized that all of us who were principally involved were either Native or queer or both,” France recalls. “We all brought a tremendous history of personal trauma to all of these questions that we were taking on. That united us in our dedicated pursuit of truth in this story. What we all shared was the experience of having things go remarkably badly based on prejudice in our personal lives, in our collective communities. It wasn’t hard for us to see where that happened in the story of Leonard Peltier, where he was carrying the weight of punishment that the federal government wanted to burden the entire movement with.”

In the process of interviewing the witnesses, survivors and elders, Short Bull deployed a style rooted more in the Lakota culture of storytelling than in common journalistic practice. “What was ingrained in me being around Pine Ridge was how you communicate with people. Essentially, every word that you speak should be viewed like a prayer. So you have to be really careful about what you say and how you talk to people that are older than you.

“In this process of filmmaking, it’s a delicate balance,” Short Bull continues. “You want to try to get to the story, but you also have to take into account that there’s a spiritual component to every action that we do. How I navigate that balance is by trying to treat everyone like I would my grandparents or my closest relative. Some of these things are so intense that how you talk about them has to be done with great care, great purpose”

For France, this protocol meant rethinking the art of interviewing, as informed by his longtime journalistic practice. “When I first started on the project, I’d spent some time on the reservation in Pine Ridge, but [this] was my first time as a storyteller, as a journalist, and I recognized that it was a world that was very different from the one I come from. One of our producers suggested that we begin our process with a prayer for the production. We reached out to a spiritual leader, who gathered us together and offered a prayer for us, but it was also a kind of a master class in how we had to go about our research on this project. The key thing that he said to me was, ‘Don’t ask for anything; wait for it to come.’ He also said something that they tell us in journalism school: Leave yourself behind.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I attempt to practice what I sometimes call ‘radical empathy’ in my journalism,” France continues. “It’s an effort to really remove my own perspective and point of view in order to try and feel what the person feels, whose story I’m telling, or what their community feels. I knew it was going to be difficult for me in this story. Just watching Jesse’s remarkable interviewing patterns and how deep he was able to penetrate the story, without really asking for the story. And often, Jesse would keep his eyes closed through the interview, and didn’t ask follow-up questions.”

Banner calling for freedom for Leonard Peltier
Banner calling for freedom for Leonard Peltier

Speaking of interviews, journalist Kevin McKiernan, who covered the Pine Ridge episode and its aftermath, spoke to Peltier in 1990, and that conversation serves as a narrative throughline for the film. Short Bull and France used other audio sources, such as phone conversations friends and family had surreptitiously recorded. Thanks to AI technology, the filmmakers enhanced the quality of all of the recordings.

“We were able to take the vocal data set from that interview that Kevin did and use Leonard’s voice to re-voice Leonard’s voice, and put it all into this kind of singular vocal environment to make it seem as though it were a master interview that drove the entire thing,” France explains. “And there was a small part where we used his writings to address an area that he hadn’t covered. This was all done with his permission.”

In addition to the interviews and footage, the filmmakers availed themselves of massive amounts of material compiled by both AIM and the NDN Collective, a South Dakota-based Indigenous-led activist organization.

ADVERTISEMENT

President Biden’s 11th-hour clemency culminated a positive series of circumstances: Biden had also appointed the first Native American cabinet secretary, Deb Haaland, as Secretary of the Interior, and just weeks before the U.S. presidential election, he issued a public apology for the U.S. Indian Boarding School Program, a notorious chapter of cultural erasure, forced assimilation and rampant abuse. In addition, the filmmakers and their impact team presented a work-in-progress screening of Free Leonard Peltier on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC in December that was well-attended and well-received. “People really felt the need to do something on Leonard’s case,” France maintains. “Biden’s legacy is that he has been the most pro-Indigenous president in U.S. history, and that he could really seal that with clemency for Leonard. I think that that conversation, of which we played a very small part, was really beginning to ramp up after December.”

But now, given the current administration’s turbo-charged authoritarian proclivities, the team is facing significant headwinds. Nonetheless, they are fielding invitations from festivals, are in talks with prospective distributors, and as part of their impact campaign, they will take Free Leonard Peltier on a reservation tour, with significant support from the California-based San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, the film’s presenting partner.

“There is hope,” Short Bull asserts. “Back in the ’70s, things got so bad. There was no justice; it was just so dangerous, but especially to a lot of the people that I know from Pine Ridge, who keep history and stories. We’ve seen darker days, where our people were hurting each other regularly. But a lot of positive activity grew out of that. So you can look to history to see how you can get through times where these things seem scary. If we can crawl out of that, we can get out of any situation.”

Best of Deadline

Sign up for Deadline's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

続きを読む

Advertisement

Advertisement

あなたにおすすめ
退職金の平均・相場は? 勤続年数・企業規模・業種・学歴別に紹介
退職金の平均・相場は? 勤続年数・企業規模・業種・学歴別に紹介
この記事では、退職金の相場を勤続年数や企業規模、業種、学歴の4つの指標から紹介します。退職金の受け取り方や、税金のかかり方などについても解説しますので、退職後の生活を検討するうえで参考にしてください。詳細は以下のリンクからご覧ください。
We review 100s of products a month — here are 9 we would actually recommend from March
We review 100s of products a month — here are 9 we would actually recommend from March
In February, our small but mighty team of shopping editors tried dozens of products, ranging from sleep trackers and humidifiers to extended reality glasses, winter jackets and everything in between.
Trump's tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum now in place
Trump's tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum now in place
WASHINGTON — The latest move in U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to realign global trade came into force Wednesday as all countries, including Canada, were hit with 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports into the United States.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Housing Market Alert: Why a 5% Mortgage Rate Could Spark a Buying Frenzy
Housing Market Alert: Why a 5% Mortgage Rate Could Spark a Buying Frenzy
If you're among the millions of Americans planning to buy a home this year — particularly if it's your first — you're probably keeping a close eye on the housing market. Like an eagle scanning for prey, you wait patiently for that perfect four-bedroom in the top school district to appear within striking distance before making your move.
'Youth dividend': Canada's population growth crisis could yield long-term benefits
'Youth dividend': Canada's population growth crisis could yield long-term benefits
Canada’s breakneck population growth over the last several years could provide a significant economic advantage in the future, countering the present-day negative strain on infrastructure, services and housing, a CIBC economist says.
Emotional, tense Whitehorse Catholic school council meeting held in wake of principal stepping down
Emotional, tense Whitehorse Catholic school council meeting held in wake of principal stepping down
Parents and teachers at a Whitehorse Catholic school council meeting Monday called for the territory's education department to take action following the departure of the principal who alleged years of bullying and interference by the local bishop.

Advertisement

アクセスランキング
Tesla Shares Plunge 15%, Erasing Post-Election Gains Amid Ongoing Demand Concerns
Tesla Shares Plunge 15%, Erasing Post-Election Gains Amid Ongoing Demand Concerns
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
“Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” OK, that’s the wrong play since it’s a line from “Macbeth,” but it best sums up Jonathan Bailey’s performance in the new London production of “Richard II”: The actor cranks up several gears the moment his character is forced by usurper Henry Bullingbrook to give up the throne of England for a life of imprisonment in the second half of director Nicholas Hytner’s staging of Shakespeare’s history play. But the fact that Bailey takes time to catch fire is not entirely his fault, since neither Shakespeare nor Hytner make life easy for him. Given that the play is set at the close of the 14th century, it’s no surprise that Hytner believes the play, which depicts the ushering in of a nation’s decades-long succession crisis, needs contemporary reference points. That explains composer Grant Olding’s doom-laden, grinding, low strings that herald a driving rhythm and a light-touch, bitter piano melody opening the production, a clear hat-tip to Nicholas Britell’s Beethoven-tinged theme to “Succession.” It also governs Bob Crowley’s crisp men-in-black-suits design. The antithesis of the exuberantly colored “Guys and Dolls,” the last show to play at Hytner’s physically versatile Bridge Theatre (and which ran almost two years), this limited run of “Richard II” is stripped-down and stern. Gone is the expected heraldry and splendor of the English court in which King Richard traditionally basks. Instead, the audience is arranged in the round observing a traverse-style black runway staging with changing, minimal locations being lifted up through the floor on hydraulics. It makes for welcome fluidity, highly useful in a play that, for the first half at least, moves through an uncomfortable number of locations and a load of exposition.This is a story about the threat to the kingdom and, specifically, Richard, who ruled neither wisely nor well with absolute power by ancient Divine Right. The nation is torn apart by the plots and counterplots of men and their forces loyal to the crown and those backing Henry Bullingbrook, the Duke of Hereford who, successfully as it turns out, puts his eyes on the ultimate prize and steals it.That the tussle for dominance between the men is so potentially dramatic is illustrated by the fact that around fifty years ago, Richard Pasco and Ian Richardson, two leading Shakespeareans of their day, alternated the roles when they led the play in a celebrated RSC production. Here, alas, the balance is uneven. Royce Pierreson is nicely forthright and determined but his performance is unvarying. The wonderfully character-driven abdication scene between the two men is the production’s highpoint, but elsewhere Pierreson’s determination is too one-note. Anyone questioning the wisdom of the star-casting of “Bridgerton” and “Wicked” talent Bailey should bear in mind that he played Cassio in Hytner’s riveting “Othello” at the National Theatre back in 2013 and followed that with an arresting Edgar/Mad Tom opposite Ian McKellen’s King Lear for director Jonathan Munby. As a result, his handling of the language and, crucially, the intent behind it, is entirely easeful. His king is self-satisfied and perfectly petulant, dispatching orders, and often men’s lives, with gleaming disdain. He’s even better when he’s calmly and quietly coming to understand himself and the nature of his previous selfishness in the play’s highly reflective and tender final scenes.But between those extremes of temperament, the living center of the character remains unseen, robbing the production of strength. That’s partly because he has to energize scenes that here lack force. Hytner is unquestionably one of the great directors of Shakespeare, but this production is uncharacteristically undercast in places. Some of the acting proves more proficient than powerful.
‘Richard II’ Review: Jonathan Bailey Shows Off His Shakespearean Chops in a Stern, Stripped-Down Production
Matthew Tkachuk's Mysterious Injury Gives Chris Kreider An Opportunity
Chris Kreider is set to make his 4 Nations Face-Off debut on Monday night with Matthew Tkachuk out with an unidentified injury.
Matthew Tkachuk's Mysterious Injury Gives Chris Kreider An Opportunity
Travis Sanheim Picks Up Assist For Canada; Flyers Duo Headed To 4-Nations Final Against Head Coach
In a pivotal 4 Nations Face-Off semifinal, Team Canada secured a 5-3 victory over Finland at TD Garden in Boston, propelling them into the championship final against Team USA.
Travis Sanheim Picks Up Assist For Canada; Flyers Duo Headed To 4-Nations Final Against Head Coach
Underrated Senators Defenceman Nikolas Matinpalo Doesn't Deserve Diminished Role In Ottawa
The inclusion of Nikolas Matinpalo for Finland's Four Nations Faceoff entry raised some eyebrows around this city.
Underrated Senators Defenceman Nikolas Matinpalo Doesn't Deserve Diminished Role In Ottawa
Too Bonkers to Be Believed? Why the Creators of the Broadway Musical ‘Operation Mincemeat’ Had to Cut Some Real-Life Details From the True Story
The real-life story behind the Olivier Award-winning musical “Operation Mincemeat” isn’t just stranger than fiction. It’s so strange that some parts of the story proved just too much for audiences to buy.
Too Bonkers to Be Believed? Why the Creators of the Broadway Musical ‘Operation Mincemeat’ Had to Cut Some Real-Life Details From the True Story
“RuPaul's Drag Race Live!” Celebrates 1000th Vegas Show, Creators Say It's 'More Important Now Than Ever' (Exclusive)
Denise Truscello/Getty
“RuPaul's Drag Race Live!” Celebrates 1000th Vegas Show, Creators Say It's 'More Important Now Than Ever' (Exclusive)
80 Years After the Tokyo Firebombing, Survivors Seek Compensation for the Devastation
80 Years After the Tokyo Firebombing, Survivors Seek Compensation for the Devastation
Steven Spielberg Pranked Harrison Ford on Set by Giving Out ‘About 300 Copies’ of Ford’s Biography That He Despised: ‘Everybody Was Reading That’
Ke Huy Quan recently told The Guardian that one of his most fond memories of making “The Goonies” was an unforgettable prank producer Steven Spielberg played on Harrison Ford, Quan’s “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” co-star who visited the set during production.
Steven Spielberg Pranked Harrison Ford on Set by Giving Out ‘About 300 Copies’ of Ford’s Biography That He Despised: ‘Everybody Was Reading That’
‘The View’ On MAGA Backlash Over Tom Hanks’ ‘SNL50’ ‘Black Jeopardy’ Sketch: “They’re Making Anyone Who Voted For Trump Look Like A Racist”
The View addressed the MAGA backlash over Tom Hanks’ appearance on SNL50: The Anniversary Special on Sunday, when the actor reprised his role of Doug on the sketch “Black Jeopardy.”
‘The View’ On MAGA Backlash Over Tom Hanks’ ‘SNL50’ ‘Black Jeopardy’ Sketch: “They’re Making Anyone Who Voted For Trump Look Like A Racist”
離婚調停の弁護士費用はいくら?費用を抑える5つのポイント
この記事では、離婚調停の弁護士費用について、相場や内訳、誰が負担するのかなどを解説していきます。弁護士費用を抑えるポイントも紹介しますので、離婚調停で弁護士に依頼するか迷われている方や、費用面に不安を感じていらっしゃる方、ぜひ参考になさってください。詳細は以下のリンクからご覧ください。
離婚調停の弁護士費用はいくら?費用を抑える5つのポイント
Residents anxious about drug-related crime in N.W.T.'s South Slave region
Residents in the N.W.T.'s South Slave region are on edge after some recent incidents that police have linked to the illegal drug trade — and RCMP say their big challenge is getting people to speak out if they know something.
Residents anxious about drug-related crime in N.W.T.'s South Slave region
Denise Richards Cries After Daughter Sami Reveals She Wants a Nose Job and Was Bullied for Resembling Dad Charlie Sheen
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Race to Erase MS; Sami Sheen/Instagram
Denise Richards Cries After Daughter Sami Reveals She Wants a Nose Job and Was Bullied for Resembling Dad Charlie Sheen
Britain's Airport Coordination beats Qantas-Virgin JV to manage slots in Sydney
By Nikita Maria Jino
Britain's Airport Coordination beats Qantas-Virgin JV to manage slots in Sydney
Couple Arrested for Allegedly Murdering 13-Year-Old Girl Over Stolen Chocolates
Getty
Couple Arrested for Allegedly Murdering 13-Year-Old Girl Over Stolen Chocolates
Nebraska Man Missing for 16 Months Found Dead in Wooded Area About Half a Mile from His Home
Facebook
Nebraska Man Missing for 16 Months Found Dead in Wooded Area About Half a Mile from His Home
5 barriers women face to saving money and how to overcome them
5 barriers women face to saving money and how to overcome them
Tesla begins mass production of revamped Model Y in Shanghai factory
BEIJING (Reuters) - U.S. automaker Tesla said on Tuesday it has started mass production of the revamped version of its Model Y in its Shanghai factory.
Tesla begins mass production of revamped Model Y in Shanghai factory
The Traitors: Alan Cumming’s Best Season 3 Looks, Ranked!
Even traitors and faithful alike would agree: If Alan Cumming’s looks could kill, we’d all be six feet under.
The Traitors: Alan Cumming’s Best Season 3 Looks, Ranked!
Analysis-Europe's airlines pivot to bite size M&A deals to limit cost, regulatory burden
By Joanna Plucinska and Andres Gonzalez
Analysis-Europe's airlines pivot to bite size M&A deals to limit cost, regulatory burden

Advertisement