2017 film by Taylor Sheridan
Wind River
is a 2017
neo-Western
crime
film written and directed by
Taylor Sheridan
. It is the third film by Sheridan on the modern American West. The film stars
Jeremy Renner
and
Elizabeth Olsen
as a
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
tracker
and an
FBI
agent, respectively, who try to solve a murder on the
Wind River Indian Reservation
in
Wyoming
.
Gil Birmingham
,
Jon Bernthal
, and
Graham Greene
also star.
Sheridan has said that he wrote the film to raise awareness of the issue of
the high number of Indigenous women who are raped and murdered
, both on and off reservations.
Wind River
premiered at the
2017 Sundance Film Festival
and was released in the United States on August 4, 2017. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and was a box office success, grossing $45 million against an $11 million budget. It was theatrically released by
The Weinstein Company
(TWC), but in October 2017, following the reporting of
numerous sexual abuse allegations against Harvey Weinstein
, the film's distribution rights for home media were acquired by
Lionsgate
.
Plot
[
edit
]
During the winter on the Wind River Indian Reservation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Agent Cory Lambert discovers the frozen body of 18-year-old Natalie Hanson of the
Northern Arapaho
tribe. FBI Special Agent Jane Banner arrives to investigate the possible
homicide
. Banner learns from Natalie's father, Martin, that his daughter was dating a new boyfriend whose name he does not know.
Natalie's
autopsy
shows signs of
blunt trauma
and
rape
and confirms Lambert's deduction that Natalie died from
pulmonary hemorrhage
caused by inhaling
subzero air
. The
medical examiner
refuses to classify the death as a homicide, so Banner cannot get additional help from her supervisors.
Lambert is informed by Natalie's brother Chip that Natalie's boyfriend is Matt Rayburn, a
security guard
at a nearby oil-drilling site. Lambert and Banner soon find Matt's naked, mutilated body in the snow. Lambert reveals to Banner that his 16-year-old daughter Emily died in a similar manner to Natalie three years earlier, and the case remains unsolved.
Banner,
tribal police
Chief Ben Shoyo, and other law enforcement officers visit the drilling site, where Curtis, the security supervisor, and several security guards meet them. They claim Matt left a few days prior following an argument with Natalie. One guard mentions they heard about Natalie's body being found, and Banner states that Natalie's name has not been released to the public. The guards claim they learned it by monitoring a
police scanner
. One of Banner's team notices the guards slowly surrounding them and draws his weapon. The confrontation quickly escalates into an armed standoff which Banner defuses.
In a
flashback
, Matt's drunken colleagues barge into his trailer while he is in bed with Natalie. Matt is provoked to violence, and the other guards retaliate while Pete rapes Natalie. Matt is beaten to death, but his attempt to fight back allows Natalie to try to escape by running cross-country to the mobile home where her brother lives.
In the present, Lambert traces the tracks from where Matt's corpse was found back to the drilling camp. As Banner and the others approach Pete's trailer, Lambert radios a warning to Shoyo. Pete responds to a veiled warning from Curtis by firing a shotgun through the door, wounding Banner. A gunfight ensues, and Shoyo and the other officers are killed. As the remaining guards prepare to execute Banner, Lambert kills four with his rifle. A wounded Pete flees on foot, but Lambert apprehends him.
At
Gannett Peak
, Lambert forces Pete to confess before offering him the same chance Natalie had: try to stay alive by running to a distant road barefoot and wearing lightweight clothing. Pete runs but quickly succumbs as his lungs give out from the frigid air. Lambert visits Banner in the hospital and praises her toughness. He visits with Martin and they share grief over the deaths of their daughters.
A
title card
states that missing persons statistics are kept for every demographic group except
Native American women
, whose numbers remain unknown.
Cast
[
edit
]
Production
[
edit
]
According to Sheridan, he was inspired to write this film because he learned about the "thousands of actual stories just like it," referring to the high number of
Indigenous women who are victims of sexual assault and/or murder
.
[6]
He wrote and directed the movie to make more people aware of this problem.
[7]
The film is the third installment of Taylor Sheridan's trilogy of "the modern-day American frontier", the first being
Sicario
in 2015, and
Hell or High Water
the next year.
[8]
Principal photography
on the film began on March 12, 2016, in
Utah
and lasted until April 25, 2016.
[9]
Release
[
edit
]
The Weinstein Company
acquired the distribution rights on May 13, 2016, during the 2016
Cannes Film Festival
.
[10]
In January 2017, it was announced that the company would no longer distribute the film,
[11]
but the distribution deal was later finalized.
[12]
It had a limited release on August 4, 2017, before going wide on August 18.
[13]
In October 2017, following reporting on the
Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse scandal
,
Lionsgate
announced that it would distribute the film on home media and streaming services. The Weinstein Company (TWC) name and logo were omitted from the credits, trailer, and packaging. As a result, The Weinstein Company finally stopped distributing the film.
[3]
Sheridan had required that TWC be deleted from the materials, and demanded that all money Weinstein would have made on this work be donated to charity.
[14]
Reception
[
edit
]
Box office
[
edit
]
Wind River
grossed $33.8 million in the United States and Canada and $11.2 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $45 million, against a production budget of $11 million.
[2]
In the film's limited opening weekend, it made $161,558 from four theaters (a per-location average of $40,390, one of the best of 2017), finishing 29th at the box office.
[15]
[16]
In its second week, the film expanded to 45 theaters and grossed $622,567.
[17]
The film expanded to 694 theaters on August 18 and grossed $3 million, finishing tenth at the box office.
[18]
The following week the film was added to an additional 1,401 theaters (for a total of 2,095) and made $4.6 million (an increase of 54.6%), finishing fourth at the box office.
[19]
The film opened in another 507 theaters and made $5.7 million the following weekend, and an estimated $7.2 million over the four-day Labor Day weekend, finishing in the second spot at the U.S. box office consistently for the next 13 days.
[20]
It was the sixth-highest grossing
indie film
of 2017.
[21]
Critical response
[
edit
]
On
review aggregator
website
Rotten Tomatoes
, the film has an approval rating of 87% based on 254 reviews, with an average rating of 7.7/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "
Wind River
lures viewers into a character-driven mystery with smart writing, a strong cast, and a skillfully rendered setting that delivers the bitter chill promised by its title."
[22]
On
Metacritic
, the film has a weighted average score of 73 out of 100, based on 44 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
[23]
Audiences polled by
PostTrak
gave the film a 90% overall positive score and a 70% "definite recommend".
[16]
Owen Gleiberman
of
Variety
described
Wind River
as a "humanistic crime drama, though this one has more skill than excitement".
[24]
Chris Plante of
The Verge
described it as "a thrilling, violent finale to the
Hell or High Water
and
Sicario
trilogy", and as "
Coen brothers
noir
meets the case of the week."
[25]
Writing for
Rolling Stone
,
Peter Travers
praised Sheridan's direction and the cast, giving the film 3/4 stars. He wrote: "[It's] the set-up for what could have been a conventional whodunit ? thankfully, Sheridan is allergic to all things conventional. To him, the action is character, and he's lucked out by finding actors who not only understand his approach but thrive on it."
[26]
David Ehrlich of
IndieWire
gave the film a B, writing: "[If]
Wind River
shares Sheridan’s self-evident weaknesses, it also makes the most of his signature strengths. [...]
Wind River
may not blow you away, but this bitter, visceral, and almost paradoxically intense thriller knows what it takes to survive."
[27]
In a
High Country News
article titled "Why do white writers keep making films about Indian Country?", Native commentator Jason Asenap praises the film as "a thinking-person's thriller" full of complex characters, and describes the film's focus on missing Native American women as "admirable." He criticizes the film for perpetuating the "dying Indians" motif:
"at least in Hollywood, the Indians die. To this day, the Indians die, and not just physically, but culturally. Simpson and Sheridan are invested in making us see how America has screwed Native people, but to the point of rubbing it in our faces. Is it so terrible to live in one’s own homeland? It may be hard to get out, but it certainly feels condescending for a non-Native to write as much."
[28]
The filmmakers were criticized for casting non-Native actors in some of the
Native American
roles.
Kelsey Chow
had been advertised as
Eastern Band Cherokee
, leading the Eastern Band Cherokee to issue a statement that she is neither an enrolled member nor descended from the tribe.
[29]
[30]
Sheridan was also criticized for claiming the film "actually changed a law" in an interview with
The Hollywood Reporter
, referring to the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) Reauthorization Act, which
President Biden
signed into law in 2022.
"Yellowstone
creator Taylor Sheridan’s attempt to take credit for the passage of VAWA is gross and completely discredits years of tireless advocacy from the Native community,” Native rights attorney
Mary Kathryn Nagle
(Cherokee) published on IllumiNative, a Native woman-led racial & social justice organisation.
[31]
Accolades
[
edit
]
Sequel
[
edit
]
In November 2022,
Kari Skogland
signed on to direct a sequel titled
Wind River: The Next Chapter
, from a screenplay by
Patrick Massett
and
John Zinman
, and starring
Martin Sensmeier
.
Principal photography
took place from March 15 to April 24, 2023 in
Calgary
.
[36]
[37]
The sequel was confirmed in August 2023. Neither Jeremy Renner or Elizabeth Olsen are confirmed to star.
[38]
Notes
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
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{{
cite web
}}
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link
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External links
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