Unfortunately, its wobbly and preachy dramatic narrative diminishes its power. We're getting a lecture here in skimpy dramatic clothing. The most powerful social statements in dramatic film, of course, are those that seek to entertain first without showing their editorial seams; "In the Heat of the Night," is a glowing example.
This well-meaning and intelligent Sundance entrant lacks the storytelling finesse to do this woeful historical injustice the wider appeal it deserves.
Director Willmott deserves commendation for assembling such a wide-span story on an obviously limited budget; however, the monotony of his shot compositions, stiff cadence and tedious pacing detract from the film's message. Occasionally, there are John Ford homages with skyscapes and silhouettes, but ultimately this one is just too much by-the-book, aesthetically and thematically.
I've posted a few glowing reports about this movie. Some people may have confused "important subject matter" with "compelling storytelling."
It's too bad filmmakers don't pass their scripts by me before they film them. We'd have better Native-themed movies if they did. <g>
For more on the subject, see The Best Indian Movies.
"It's too bad filmmakers don't pass their scripts by me before they film them. We'd have better Native-themed movies if they did" Are you suggesting we need a white guy to guide us into good film-making? Gotcha!!!! Sadly, I'm only half joking. I haven't seen this film so I can't really comment.
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm suggesting that most filmmakers could use a good script reader to improve their writing. That includes The Only Good Indian's writer Thomas L. Carmody and director Kevin Willmott. As far as I know, neither of them are Native.
ReplyDeleteNatives would be the best judges of the Native aspects of the script, of course. But I bow to no one in terms of knowing what makes a story succeed or fail. If I'm not the most critical person on the planet, I'm close.
In The Only Good Indian's case, the review said it was too much of a history lesson. This is a storytelling issue, not a Native issue. I could revise a script that's "a lecture ... in skimpy dramatic clothing" as well as anyone.