Leaphorn et Chee, deux policiers navajos du sud-ouest des années 1970, sont obligés de remettre en question leurs propres croyances spirituelles lorsqu'ils recherchent des indices dans une a... Tout lireLeaphorn et Chee, deux policiers navajos du sud-ouest des années 1970, sont obligés de remettre en question leurs propres croyances spirituelles lorsqu'ils recherchent des indices dans une affaire de double meurtre.Leaphorn et Chee, deux policiers navajos du sud-ouest des années 1970, sont obligés de remettre en question leurs propres croyances spirituelles lorsqu'ils recherchent des indices dans une affaire de double meurtre.
- Récompenses
- 6 victoires et 6 nominations au total
Résumé
Avis à la une
The characters are quite appealing - I credit the fine acting for that - consequently you get invested in the show very quickly. The show doesn't pull any punches when it comes to showing the overt and systematic racism faced by Native Americans in the 1970's (not to suggest it's strictly a thing of the past), but so far it's not falling into the trap of portraying the native people as 'noble savages,' either.
This is simply good drama, and the fact that it's set on a Navajo reservation just enhances the drama rather than over-relying on it or using it as a shtick. I like this show and I think if you give it a try, you'll be hooked, too.
If you're not a big fan of the books or you don't mind bad adaptations, it's a good show. I'm on episode three and am fighting the super fan in me. I've read the books over and over so the massive changes are making me nuts. But I'm determined to get over it.
A bank is robbed and a double murder is committed of a Listening Woman/healer and her granddaughter. Are they related somehow? There are a lot of plot threads to follow and I'm not sure where they're all going yet.
I admit that I am old and well steeped in the Leaphorn and Chee tradition from the excellent novels and the Robert Redford PBS American Masterpiece programs so this version- which discards the most basic elements in favor of superficial oh so predictable plot progression and politically correct characters that this is thin gruel indeed.
Joe Leaphorn is NOT Joe Leaphorn. Bernie is NOT Bernie. And Jim Chee is from another universe altogether. It could be that everything was changed to make the series more palatable to a younger audience which has not experienced the richness of the novels from Tony Hillerman and continued by his daughter Anne, but there is no there, there and Jim Chee is NOT Jim Chee- not even close.
Maybe as a stand alone with new names for the characters it might work, but it plods and skims along the surface of something that has great potential to tell a great story.
I hope that those new to the Lephorn Chee Manuelito canon might take the time to read or listen to the books as written by the Hillermans, both father and daughter there is much to be drawn from them and, in my opinion, provide a much greater return for the time invested.
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Renewed, Canceled, or Ending?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWith production booming in New Mexico, the Tesuque Pueblo reservation converted its 1950s-era gambling destination into Camel Rock Studios, booking AMC's 'Dark Winds' as its first high-profile project.
- GaffesThe rank insignia on Joe & Bernadette's collar points change positions from one scene to the next. They have yet to be worn properly.
- Citations
Sheriff Gordo Sena: Last few years... life's gotten cheap. The monsters ain't just in the shadows. They're in broad damn daylight. Country's got the devil in it, Joe, and no one is calling him to account, which you know... more than most.
- ConnexionsVersion of Le Vent sombre (1991)
Meilleurs choix
- How many seasons does Dark Winds have?Alimenté par Alexa
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