Two adolescent Navajo cousins from different worlds bond during a summer herding sheep on their grandmother's ranch in Arizona while learning more about their family's past and themselves.
This movie contains 5 potentially triggering events.
After the scene where Frybread Face makes the joke about their great-grandfather’s statue being like Han Solo, Benny looks out the window and sees in the distance the ice cream truck has stopped because it’s hit the family dog Reba. Not much is shown — just Reba’s back legs and tail, not moving. Benny very gently covers her with a blanket and lifts her into a little red wagon, and his Uncle Martin is visibly upset that Reba has died. Then the scene ends, and it cuts to Benny and Martin, having just buried Reba and very sad about it.
The characters eat mutton for dinner at some point, so presumably a sheep is butchered off-screen at some point. Or possibly bought, I guess. You do see the head on the table, but it’s not the focus of any of the shots, so sorta easy to ignore.
Benny’s closing monologue simply mentions that his grandmother, who I would say qualifies as a central character of the story, passed away later. It is not shown.
There is a scene about 40 minutes in where Marvin calls Benny the f slur. He also berates him multiple times throughout the film for not being “manly” enough
There is a scene where Benny comes across a Playboy magazine and flips through it until he sees a page displaying a nude woman’s breasts. He shuts the magazine closed pretty quickly. it’s onscreen for less than 3 seconds