Share:

Movies: Best "native" Movies


All Providers

Sort by:
6 movies found (page 1/1):

Son of Godzilla(1967)

3.2/5 (with 76 votes)

Reporter Goro Maki stumbles upon scientists conducting weather experiments on Sollgel Island in the South Seas. He discovers the island is inhabited by giant mantis and a woman named Saeko who's been cast away since the death of her father. The pair soon find a helpless infant monster that Godzilla must adopt and learn to raise as one of his own.

Murders in the Rue Morgue(1932)

3.1/5 (with 47 votes)

In 19th Century Paris, a maniac abducts young women and injects them with ape blood in an attempt to prove ape-human kinship but constantly meets failure as the abducted women die.

Moana(1926)

NR
| 1h 17min | Documentary
3.3/5 (with 16 votes)

Robert J. Flaherty's South Seas follow-up to Nanook of the North is a Gauguin idyll moved by "pride of beauty... pride of strength.".

Directed by Robert J. Flaherty

The Wendigo(2023)

An archaeological team from an Ivy League school discover something unexpected in their remote forest excavations of an ancient Native American site.

Cu-ckoo(2023)

22min | Horror

After moving to a new house, the hero meets an unknown girl-neighbor and immediately becomes a witness of inexplicable events. Trying to understand the mystical events, the hero enters into a confrontation with the girl's father, who keeps a shocking secret.

Kusah Hakwaan(1999)

NR
| 1h 15min | Horror

Filmed entirely on location in Alaska comes Kusah Hakwaan - a dramatic feature film that takes its name from a demonic Tlingit Indian witch who lives in the spirit worlds of Southeast Alaska. In a dark, fire-lit Clan House, a Tlingit Elder moves moves between the contemporary and spirit worlds as he reveals the centuries-old legend of Kusah Hakwaan. He tells a gripping story of evil, heroism, brotherly rivalry, and the ancient Trickster Raven. With innovative visual-effects, compelling action scenes, and breathtaking footage, the production weaves together creation myths to explain the unknown. The resulting story echoes the Tlingit's esteemed tribal values, ancient traditions, and the influence of the all-knowing spiritual world. Kusah Hakwaan is the first feature film made in Alaska by an Alaskan.