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No wonder you can't find much material. Hollywood has been rectifying portrayal of Indians aka American Indians aka Native Americans for more than 50 years. People haven't been paying much attention if they claim stereotyping. You'd find more films about attempts to portray them fairly than as stereotypes. Just recently, I've watched an array of films that obviously avoided the portrayals:
Broken Arrow (1950)
Little Big Man (1970)
I Will Fight No More Forever (1975 TV movie)
Dances With Wolves (1990)
Smoke Signals (1998)
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (2007 TV movie)
You'd have to go far, far back to find the portrayals people claim are so common. Most of them time, these would occur in low-budget Westerns from the Silents to somewhere in the Forties. You must recall that some of the portrayals were affected by people who likely had family stories about encounters with "hostiles" as they migrated westward. Massacres happened on both sides; atrocities were done by both. And, sometimes they befriended each other.
If you randomly pick some old films, they might be what you want. But, for films that generally were box-office, examples might be more difficult. I must say that, between "Little Big Man" and "Dances With Wolves", the Pawnee certainly had a lot of "bad press".
NOTE: My ancestry includes members of the Illini. I also attend local pow wows. I can assure you that most of the people I know do not mind the word "Indian" and often use "American Indian". When people say "Native American", they are reminded, "We emigrated, too." I've heard that at nearly every event I've attended. So, you shouldn't be jumped for using "Indian".
I would like to add that, in 1973, I met and spoke with Frank Clearwater, who was on his way to take part in the protest at Wounded Knee. During the violence there, he was shot while sleeping and died of his injury a week later (April 17-25). It soon will be the anniversary of the event that led up to it:
The Wounded Knee incident began February 27, 1973, when the town of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, was seized by followers of the American Indian Movement (AIM). The occupiers controlled the town for 71 days while the U.S. Marshals Service laid siege.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wounded_Knee_incident
EDIT: I'm still looking for "bad" movies, but, when I read the descriptions, reviewers counter the "stereotype" keyword that led me there. I'm not sure how the movie can be both: stereotypical yet an interesting portrayal. I suppose you would have to watch them. I'll keep looking for movies that can be used.
Sorry. I still find more good ones than bad ones. Here's a page that could be of interest, but it buries the notion of stereotypes even more, meaning that, even when I've been digging, I haven't unearthed bad ones, even going back to movie serials, all of which have Native American heroes, even when the lead mistakenly believes he is part of the tribe but was adopted.
http://ladyhawkesite.tripod.com/nativemovies.htm
http://www.americanwest.com/pages/namovies.htm
All of the above tend to receive more thumbs up than down, but maybe you can pick out the weaker ones.
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