52 Films by Women Vol 2. 52. WOMAN WALKS AHEAD (Director: Susanna White)
When making films about inspiring real life people,
filmmakers aren’t obliged to be truthful. What they offer is a distillation of
the story, ignoring elements that form unwanted subplots or bumps in the
narrative. I should therefore forgive the liberties taken by writer Steven
Knight and director Susanna White in telling the extraordinary story of
Catherine Weldon, the socialite and Native American rights campaigner who
travelled in 1890 to South Dakota to paint a portrait of Sitting Bull, proud
leader of the Lakota Sioux Indians and retired member of Buffalo Bill’s Wild
West Show – he and sharp shooter Annie Oakley (of Annie Get Your Gun fame) had a thing. Catherine and Sitting Bull
formed an unlikely partnership as Bull’s people refused to sign up to the Dawes
Expropriation Act, which was designed to take land away from Native Americans
as a whole and grant small plots to individuals, with those conniving American
negotiators intending to exploit the left-over land for themselves.
I should forgive the liberties, but I don’t.
Woman Walks Ahead
has been engineered as a star vehicle for Jessica Chastain, even though Kathy
Bates might be a better fit judging by portraits of Ms Weldon. You understand
why – you need a name actress to promote the film internationally. But just
once, I would like filmmakers to give audiences a little credit. They will
watch a film if it works emotionally, if the raw details are brought vividly to
life. Woman Walks Ahead is a series
of tropes and clichés. It is not a great advert for female creativity.
As played by Chastain, Ms Weldon is a widow liberated by the
death of her husband to pursue causes closest to her heart and that means
painting Sitting Bull’s picture. In real life, she belonged to a group of East
Coast liberals who supported Native American rights, a pressure group of their
day, but Knight and White leave that detail out. Ms Weldon is depicted as an
artist, and feisty and strong-willed at that. She is quite determined to pursue
her vision because she is just a painter and it is not as if artists can change
the world, at least not in 1890s America.
What then follows is a series of incidents that expose Ms
Weldon’s naivety. First, her luggage is stolen after she is dumped miles from
the nearest outpost. She rebuffs the attention of the obligatory charming
military man, Col Silas Groves (Sam Rockwell) who, incidentally, delivers her
recovered suitcases. Catherine is told to go back East but she eventually meets
Sitting Bull (Michael Greyeyes). He isn’t impressed that she has painted
important people, that is, other white folk.
Instead, he asks for payment. After all, he’s giving away his image
rights. He might understand that one person’s portrait is another person’s
inspiration for an advertising campaign.
In real life, Catherine brought her son out west – yes, she
had a boy – and became Sitting Bull’s secretary. These details don’t neatly fit
into the classic Three Act inspirational narrative in which Catherine helps
Sitting Bull to understand that he shouldn’t make a deal with the Americans. He
respects her after she is assaulted for being an ‘Indian lover’. The scene of
violence isn’t overly graphic, but it is shocking nonetheless.
In the end, the film relies on the well-known climax at
Wounded Knee in which Sitting Bull’s resistance is met with force. Catherine is
unable to prevent Americans resorting to tactics they adopt when they cannot
make a deal – treat the other party as a threat to their way of life and steal their
assets. The growth of the ‘Ghost Dance’ – a ‘new [pan tribal] religious
movement incorporated into numerous American Indian belief systems’ (says
Wikipedia) promising a return to traditional values – didn’t help, but is no
excuse.
Woman Walks Ahead
belongs to the genre of the sexless inter-cultural romance (Chastain and
Greyeyes are both photogenic). It raises an interesting stylistic question.
When a film features two oppressed groups, is it right that the one best
representative of the audience takes precedence? What would have Woman Walks Ahead been like if the story
had been told from Sitting Bull’s point of view? Are storytellers equipped to tell
Native American stories in a way that represents them as flawed individuals
nevertheless deserving of our admiration rather than just an exotic yet wronged
group? Chastain delivers the requisite
level of proud feistiness, but I spent 101 minutes in the company of a movie
character rather than someone approaching a real woman.
Reviewed at Toronto
Film Festival, Friday 15 September 2017, 13:30, Winter Garden Theatre, Toronto, Canada
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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