poster

Thunderheart (1992)

6.3 | Apr 03, 1992 (US) | Crime, Mystery, Thriller | 01:59

Two men from different worlds. Two cops after the same killer. Together they must uncover the secrets. Together they must discover the truth.

A young mixed-blood FBI agent is assigned to work with a cynical veteran investigator on a murder on a poverty-stricken Sioux reservation.

Featured Crew

Director
Producer
Original Music Composer
Stunts
Director of Photography
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Second Unit Director
Chief Lighting Technician

Cast

profile
Val Kilmer
Ray Levoi
profile
Sam Shepard
Frank Coutelle
profile
Graham Greene
Walter Crow Horse
profile
Fred Ward
Jack Milton
profile
Fred Thompson
William Dawes
profile
Sheila Tousey
Maggie Eagle Bear
profile
Ted Thin Elk
Grandpa Sam Reaches
profile
John Trudell
Jimmy Looks Twice
profile
Julius Drum
Richard Yellow Hawk
profile
Sarah Brave
Maisy Blue Legs

Reviews

avatar
Wuchak
6 | Sep 20, 2020
_**Val Kilmer and Sam Shepard investigate a murder on a South Dakota Reservation**_ A young, half-Sioux FBI agent (Val Kilmer) teams-up with a veteran agent (Sam Shepard) to investigate a murder on a Reservation in western South Dakota where the pro-government faction conflicts with ARM, the Aboriginal Rights Movement radicals. Graham Greene plays a tribal police officer. “Thunderheart” (1992) is a Western that takes place in the modern day loosely based on events relating to the Wounded Knee incident in 1973. ARM from this movie is an expy of AIM, the American Indian Movement, which is a traditionalist organization that was radically active in those days and still exists. Some understandably consider AIM a terrorist organization back then in light of actions such as Leonard Peltier’s murder of two FBI agents in 1975 at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which is referenced by Cooch in the movie (Shepard). You don’t have to be knowledgeable of any of this stuff or to take one side or the other to appreciate the movie. While it takes a side (which I’m not going to reveal), I’m in the middle and just here for the picture. I like the film, but it’s slightly hindered by wannabe hip banter. Moreover, the almost god-like powers of certain AmerIndians are laid on too thick, but I appreciated some of the spiritual elements. The film runs 1 hours, 59 minutes, and was shot in South Dakota at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, Wounded Knee Cemetery and Badlands National Park, as well as Washington DC. GRADE: B-