Night Raiders (2021) Poster

(2021)

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5/10
Great Concept but Below Average Execution
kluseba25 April 2022
Night Raiders is a dystopian science-fiction film that serves as analogy to portray the horrors of residential schools for First Nations throughout Canada. The film was written and directed by Danis Goluet, a young woman of Cree and Metis origins from La Ronge, Saskatchewan. The movie also features numerous First Nation actresses and actors which makes for an authentic result. However, this ambitious film suffers from its extremely slow pace and strange conclusion that asks more questions than it actually answers.

The story revolves around single mother Niska and her young teenage daughter Waseese who are living in a camper in an isolated forest somewhere in the Canadian North. However, the totalitarian government expects every child to be sent to boarding schools starting at age four. That's why the government is using drones to discover children who have not been sent to those schools and their parents who are disobeying the law. One day, Waseese gets injured while hunting in the woods and needs medical help. Niska and her daughter have to get to a nearby city to get help but they soon get tracked down by drones and Niska has to give her daughter up. Instead of returning to the security of the woods or taking the opportunity to make it out of that horrible place with fake identity papers, Niska joins a group of First Nation guerillas who are kidnapping First Nation children from the boarding schools and hopes to rescue her own daughter.

This film convinces on a few levels. First of all, the locations have been chosen with care from the endless wilderness in the north as opposed to the poor, dirty and destroyed ghettos in the south and the cold boarding schools that look like prisons. Up next, the elements honouring First Nation cultures such as colourful clothing or dynamic chants have been incorporated with great care into the movie. Some of the acting performances are also very good and especially Brooklyn Letexier-Hart as resilient teenage daughter stands out as the film's greatest actress.

On the other side, this movie isn't without its flaws. First and foremost, the movie has extremely slow pace despite a rather short running time. The entire movie could have been shown in a sixty-minute episode of a dystopian television series such as Black Mirror. Up next, the movie offers few information regarding the background of the totalitarian regime and its ultimate goals as the dystopian world only seems to serve as an analogy related to the horrors First Nation members had to endure throughout the past centuries. Finally, the movie ends on a supernatural note that doesn't blend in with the rest of the film and comes as an odd twist that will leave most viewers scratching their heads. The ending refers to elements of magic that are present in many First Nation tales but this transition is poorly done in this movie and doesn't lead to a proper conclusion.

At the end of the day, Night Raiders is only interesting for those who deeply care about First Nation cultures, identities and issues. The idea behind the movie is very positive but the final result has too many flaws to make for a truly enjoyable cinematic experience. This film suffers from slow pace, weak plot and unsatisfactory resolution. There are other contemporary films dealing with First Nation and Inuit issues such as Indian Horse or The Grizzlies that are much better than Night Raiders.
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5/10
Overal disappointing, could and should have been better.
deloudelouvain16 November 2021
Night Raiders starts promising with an intriguing plot but towards the second part of the movie the quality is just tumbling down. It looks like towards the end the writers had a lack of imagination, or were just too lazy to give it a better outcome. So overal I was entertained for a bit more than half of the movie, after that I got bored. The acting is average, some were better than others. Nothing award winning that's for sure. It's too bad because Night Raiders definitely could have been better, the ingredients were there but the execution failed.
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4/10
Pacing, character building, coherent storyline? Who needs 'em?
billyhoes13 November 2021
This not the worst movie I've seen. So anyone throwing a 1 or a 2 at it is likely taking themselves a little too seriously. Likewise, it is not great or maybe even good so anyone throwing a 6 or more is invested in the movie's success or else just tolerates mediocre much better than I do.

This is not a lot of action. Not a lot of thriller. And the only real sci-fi does not make a lot of sense. You will likely have a hard time actually caring about the characters and an even harder time remaining interested in the outcome. And then when it happens you'll wish it hadn't because you will realize your investment in the payoff didn't earn much.

Other than that though, excellent movie. Watch it yourself if you don't believe me.
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4/10
An openly political movie that somehow shows the bad guys as the better option.
goodoldgrim23 November 2021
This movie tried to be an allegory about the Canadian Indian Residential school system and the problems therein. However the state authorities in the movie are given a convenient excuse for the generally terrible state of things - there's been an apocalyptic war. They are seen providing aid more than brutalizing the populace and the focal aspect of their oppression appears to be insisting that children are to be raised in a sanitary environment.

The kids are also indoctrinated into a form of nationalism, I guess, but the movie makes it look like a small price to pay for the benefits.

There's some hints at a citizen/non-citizen divide, but this is never explored. They simply forgot to make their bad guys look bad. A character even explicitly states that "they" want to take away the free people's "way of life" as an indictment of the authorities, while that way of life is shown to be wretched.

Cognitive dissonance was really my central feeling about the movie, but otherwise it can be mostly described as mediocre. Acting and cinematography is competent, if uninspired. The actual plot is simple and slow - mostly there to examine the setting. The ending is sudden and looks like it was taken out of another, probably better, movie.
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7/10
Canada's past and future fuse in a Cree legend brought to life.
Blue-Grotto31 May 2022
"They will come for us, like they always do. We try to warn the others, because we know how far these people will go, and that they will come for them too."

In the not-so-distant future Niska navigates forest and city as she flees with her daughter, Waseese, from the soldiers and drones of a militarized government. When the injured Waseese is taken by soldiers and put in a reeducation camp, Niska seeks the counsel of a friend, a lover, and a band of Cree rebels who compete for her trust. Many among the Cree believe that Niska is the visionary guide, Ogunuheneechigew, who has come to help them return to a promised land and existence. Niska just wants to see Waseese again.

Myth, assimilation, the natural world, the infamous residential schools of North America, modern technology, and even Canada's long-standing fears of their southern neighbor are all deftly woven into an enthralling story by Danis Goulet, who is Cree, in her debut feature. Don't see Night Raiders for mind-blowing dialogue that would make Noam Chomsky faint out of sheer admiration, for the acting prowess of a Natalie Portman or Daniel Day Lewis, or for special effects that would make George Lucas look like a basket weaver. Instead see it for the impressive and comforting independent spirit, creativity, and heart of a gifted storyteller.
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5/10
Solid movie with some minor flaws
opticuscro9 September 2022
It is obvious from the first scene that this is a low-budget film, but this film surprised me, and with very little rewinding I managed to watch it to the end. The story has good potential but not very well presented. I have to admit that the story is largely original, but also too sketchy and full of holes. The film is marked as action and science fiction, but I saw very little action in this film (still action well presented), as for science fiction, that genre somehow runs through the story more than visually (the biggest sf thing is some drones and that its). Well, the film, even with so many flaws, is surprisingly watchable. The film does not contain the all-popular forced woke trend content, which makes it even more watchable.
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7/10
Somepeople may get the wrong idea
monteeun-2711721 December 2021
There are reviewers who are going to say this movie is dull, boring, mediocre, no thrill or action, are probably just watching the wrong movie. Or at the very least got the wrong idea. While it's true the movie is not filled with action, it does have a decent story. So if you decide to watch the movie just be prepared.
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5/10
Reworking Cree Tribal Colonial Brutal History Of The Past Into A Distopian Colonial Brutal Future
silicontourist24 March 2022
This film I enjoyed very much indeed (I have always been hugely interested in the 500 nations and histories of indigenous peoples from around the worlds poor treatment). I would recommend watching it but if you want full disclosure, it unfortunately is not to be found here. For a Cree history story to be told, and directed, by an actual tribal nation member I was expecting a much more revealing production. It starts off with a narration from a woman that tells you diddly squat; thus you have no foundation to expand on. Even by films end you have still not discovered how everybody found themselves in the predicament that they all exist in. The colonial master type still exists with the usual social classification garbage going on but, though racism doesn't appear to be prevalent yet the indigenous Cree peoples are victimized! That is how the film trundles along and all you know is that the Cree are trying to save their children (from the colonial reform school/camp/academy).

Its a "Different day, same crap and nothing changes" story and, that's how life is and always will be. At least (but I won't hold my breath) until people get off the backsides and tell the totalitarians they have had enough!

A phrase that I have always thought as being near the top of the Top 10 list of absolute BS quotes is, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". This was said by the Spaniard - and ex Harvard Professor - George Santayana ( December/16/1863 - September/26/1952). Life does not revolve around and exist in the balance of common sense and so the quotation is irrelevant! (IMHO). Mark Twain famously said: "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." I myself have a much less comedic thought on this. My belief is that history is a brief moment of the past but human faults are permanent and never become history; therefore humanity will never learn from them!" Arrogance, brutality, bullying, greed, violence, warmongering etc have always been more important to the majority of Homo Sapiens throughout mankind's existence!
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6/10
An underwhelming and shallow narrative.
Top_Dawg_Critic17 November 2021
The feminist and culturally specific Indigenous focal point in writer and director Danis Goulet's feature debut is admirable, but is muddled, dull and falls short in her attempt to intertwine a dystopian apocalyptic sci-fi story within it.

It started off really interesting and engaging as a apocalyptic sci-fi, but then once the cultural aspect became evident, I quickly lost interest and got bored, right up to the last 5 minutes of the ending. The 101 min runtime felt much longer with the slow pacing. The cinematography was excellent, the directing decent, and the performances quite good. It's a 6/10 from me.
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3/10
Just bad
wiredarp16 August 2022
I give it 3 starts because it starts out ok, and visually it has a sort of a gritty look thats a bit like a chick centric version of Children of Men.

Unfortunately, that's about the high point. It descends from there in boring, talky moments, flails around with some rather hokey seeming 'tribal' stuff, and then ends with the stupidest and most illogical twist possible.

The only people rating this over say, 5, are only doing so because they are invested in the production for reasons other than film quality.
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8/10
A stunning gift
maraloon8 March 2022
A beautiful, bold modern allegory of the very real residential schools set in a dystopian, not-unimaginable future. A wonderful cast and tight editing. Indigenous people and language and relationships refuse to cede to the State. 💪
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7/10
Compelling
kelly-gaudreau28 June 2022
A truly compelling story of a future gone mad with comparrisons with what, we as a nation, experienced in the past. The film is very reminicsent of what Indigenious peoples experienced in residential schools.
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5/10
A dull story
mailtaskservice21 November 2021
The starting is quite dull. As the movie proceeds, its still dull till the middle section. The story and directoryship are lack of everything although it has a nice story idea.

The actors and scifi are just average. Not worth to pay to watch.
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5/10
expected aliens
SnoopyStyle19 September 2022
Niska is roaming the city with her daughter Waseese. This is a police state where children are rounded up to be re-educated.

This is taking the residential school scandal and putting a modern-day spin on it. I thought it was going sci-fi with an alien occupation story. That would be much more compelling. It would also require some cgi work which isn't their best skill set. The premise turns into a bit of a muddle. It starts well enough, but it turns into an attack on native cultures. The point of sci-fi is to give a universal take on the highlighted issue. This movie starts out that way and then it loses the thread. This could have a great sci-fi indie with a message.
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6/10
Near-future indigenous sf -- quite a combination!
gcsman21 March 2022
I got to see this in a special on-line screening, and after the show there was a nice interview with the director, Danis Goulet. She's Cree/Metis and is clearly building a reputation in production and direction. She came across as very articulate, smart, and personable -- someone you'd love to have as a friend or really just an acquaintance.

Night Raiders is a fairly straightforward adventure story, but of course it packs a message. It casts a light on the indigenous residential-school history -- one of the most shameful chapters of colonialism on this continent -- by throwing it forward into a near-future dystopian world. Some sort of wide-scale War has happened with much destruction of cities. Children of all races are rare and are all gathered up, to be put in schools that are essentially jails and training centers to turn them into soldiers who will continue 'The War'. The lead character Niska (Elle-Maija Tailfeathers) and her daughter Waseese (Brooklyn Letexier-Hart) live and hide far away from this out in the bush, but an accident forces them back into contact with the dangerous urban jungle, and we go from there. All of this is told very much from the indigenous characters' vantage point, and they correctly have most of the screen time. No spoilers -- I'll just say there is a dramatic surprise or two coming at the end, for which hints have been properly dropped earlier on.

I thought it was kind of refreshing to see a middle-aged woman as the main character in a semi-action feature (let alone an indigenous one) and Elle-Maija Tailfeathers is excellent. I'd be happy to see her again. The only cast member I knew from anywhere before is Amanda Plummer (Niska's old friend Roberta), who's almost unrecognizable. My only comment on the production is that it feels a bit episodic -- scene-to-scene jumps are not always stitched together too well. But that's minor. All worth seeing!
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4/10
"NIGHT RAIDERS" REVIEW
Mr-Topshotta12 April 2024
Directed and written by Danis Goulet. A runtime of one hour and forty-one minutes. Streaming on Hulu and Netflix.

"Niska," played by Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers, lives out in the wilderness with her daughter, "Waseese," played by Brooklyn Letexier-Hart. They are trying to keep a low profile.

An institution runs the world now. Drones monitor the skies, especially at night. Their soldiers keep their proverbial feet on society's necks. Adults can move freely for the most part, but anyone under the age of eighteen must live at the institution's headquarters. Once there, you will never see your family again. Your family is the institution.

"Niska" was doing a great job of keeping her daughter "Waseese" out of sight. But after getting injured, it was hard to move "Waseese." After visiting her friend "Roberta," played by Amanda Plummer, it was clear "Niska" had an impossible task ahead of her.

"Roberta" is also a member of the underground resistance that fights the institution. Feeling trapped, "Niska" decides to turn her daughter in and live to fight another day.

Now this band of vigilantes will try to rescue "Niska's" daughter and all the youth trapped there. Before the brainwashing settles in, and it's too late. With all this going on, they could use any help they can get. Which might come from the same person they are trying to rescue. In this unique sci-fi thriller.

"Night Raiders" was not what I expected. From the trailer and reading about it, I thought I was getting a different type of film. By the time it ended, I was still wrapping my head around what was going on.

At that point, I first gave some thought to wanting to see more to try and piece together what I was watching. I also didn't realize the heavy Native American influence in the film until the end, either.

Danis Goulet had an idea, but I couldn't figure out what it was. This was a confusing mess. I didn't know what direction it was trying to take, and I didn't piece together the importance of the children or "Waseese." A weird film I didn't enjoy watching. I give it two mor fires 🔥🔥.

#CosmoandtheMovieWithin #CosmoMovieBlog #CosmoLanier #NightRaiders.
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3/10
Interesting Twist
Conor_Waters12 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I believe this is the first movie I've seen recently which is slyly conservative. First the excessive rules and punishment's for silly things like ID. Then the idea that white female liberals view natives as victims that need to be saved. Then of course the Canadian catholic schools concept where the child is indoctrinated. Good to know North American Natives aren't as naïve as everyone else.
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8/10
Good Movie
krystalgarcia-2890913 April 2022
Could have been a great series though. The ending was lack luster and it just needed more umpgh* at the end. It like climaxed on a cliff and just went splat. I don't know what more I wanted though. I guess a happy ending but instead we were left with that weird taste after you drink a diet soda. Overall great movie though and definitely worth watching.
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8/10
It is not a Disney/Marvel production
taters_and_whiskey22 December 2021
Yes, I know this film is a bit lo-fi, yet the acting leads are superb, the story a bit too believable--especially in terms of recently uncovered nightmares of Indian schools, and the malicious tech right on target. Was there a bit too much left from he editing room intact: YES. But some of these actors probably worked their whole lives to get into a wide-distribution release. I appreciated the film on many levels and would hope other viewers would as well.
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8/10
Pleasant suprise
mgools8 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This movie really hit home as an ex teacher. Seeing our schools and current government trying to indorenate our kids. Grabbing them at a young age and feeding them false information and brainwashing them into certain ideologies. I thought the the execution of the movie and the acting were good, and the character choices were spot on in my opinion. The writing was passible, but the story helped to compensate for the things that were lacking. I might be slower than some here, as I was wondering where that bird whispering was going. I wish it would have touch a little more on why this word was important, and how it changed things. All and all a very good movie that shows the concerns of indoctrination and lack of freedom created by doing so.
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10/10
An Allegory for the Times
bobbytwotwo27 December 2021
Most people would take Night Raiders at face value from the beginning. It seems to be Apocalyptic Science Fiction, but really is more of an allegory. For about 3/4 of the movie I couldn't understand why a Kiwi Maori would be parachuted into this story. And then it not only made sense, it became clear that character was essential to the universality of the story.

If, by the end, you don't think Night Raiders is one of the best movies you've ever seen, do some research, and watch it again.
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10/10
Well Done
zqhvdbmt15 April 2022
I'm a white guy but I definitely felt the strong message around residential schools and colonialism more broadly. Anyone who didn't like this movie clearly didn't understand it. Ending was well done too. It was exciting and outspoken, and adapted a dystopian viewpoint that connects so well with our past as Canadians. Well done.
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8/10
One country, one language and one flag?
frank-liesenborgs7 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"Night Raiders" takes place in the year 2043 and scrutinises a real-world outrage (the Canadian residential school system). Canada and the United States are no longer bastions of freedom. A toxic political system ignited a civil war and the two countries merged into a single State. It is portrayed as a sci-fi movie but it is not far away from the reality. Excellent acting performances from Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers (Niska) and Brooklyn Letexier-Hart (Waseese). The movie covers residential schools, illegal encampments, immigration, colonization, Big Brother states, refugees, police brutality, political polarization, and a viral outbreak. A lot of heavy stuff to deal with in one movie. The scene where they have to sing "One country, one language and one flag" is a confrontation with the harsh reality of just the opposite. And with the help of the magnificent filming and cinematography there is never a dull moment is this surprisingly good movie.
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10/10
Heartbreaking and heartwarming.
rosemansbridge7 December 2022
For everyone who has dared leave a negative review, I challenge you to make a movie that comes close to this while also considering the trauma that your family, extended family, friends, acquaintances have been through and continue to experience while living in land that is yours but you are not allowed to "feel at home" in. Whether that is not a warm place to sleep at night or your children being taken away because your family has been stripped of their ability to live a comfortable life. Respectfully, be quiet. This is a beautiful piece of story telling, built with love, gratitude, respect. Nothing is 100% perfect, but this is close and it is also 100% essential.
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10/10
A MUST WATCH
stephanie-brady317 July 2022
Ignore the 2, 3, and 4 star reviews!

This movie is a beautiful showing of how the powers in control can end us all - native or not. It also shows how to survive it all - if you have eyes to see.

Thanks to all cast, crew, and producers for this heart tugging journey!! This is my new favorite movie!

Thank you! *standing ovation*
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