I watched the 2020 Japanese movie Ainu Morir on Netflix on the weekend, and I recommend it at least as an educational exercise, despite some misgivings.
It's set in what I take to be a real Hokkaido village* where the old native folk from that part of Japan make a living from tourism. The credits at the end would seem to indicate that a lot of people were playing themselves.
I have never read much about the Ainu - as far as I know, they are largely ignored by Japanese society. The film might well be an attempt to remedy that. As such, it is a pretty sympathetic treatment of them and their (barely holding on) culture.
The film's key plot is about their bear sacrifice ritual, which made it particularly relevant to me, given my musing recently about the ubiquity of sacrifice in old human societies. However, I am not sure it satisfactorily walks the fine line between respect for cultures facing modernity and the unwarranted romanticism of their tribal beliefs.
To explain more, you would have had to have seen it. Anyone who has, feel free to comment below.
* Yes, here it is.
Update: Apart from the lengthy Wikipedia entry on the Ainu, there is this Smithsonian Magazine article which is a good read.
On worshipping bears generally, there's a short history here of different groups that have done it.
I kept wondering while watching whether there might be an ancestral connection between Ainu people and native Americans, especially those in Alaska. But no, genetic investigations indicate that's not the case. They were just both really into bears.
Well, actually, it would seem that according to that article, any native peoples living in bear country thought bears were worth worshipping. Not to mention eating, but in a very ritual fashion:
Erk.
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