War Pony marks directorial and screenwriting debuts for both Riley Keough and Gina Gammell, but also screenwriting debuts for Bill and Frank, encouraged by Keough and Gammell to tell any story they wanted through film.
Evis Presley’s granddaughter Riley Keough makes her directorial debut with the Un Certain Regard selection, War Pony.
Oglala Lakota and Sicangu Lakota citizens of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and Rosebud Sioux Tribe, who had never acted or worked on a film before, contributed to this enterprise.
Bill and Frank chose to write a story about two young Oglala Lakota men coming into their own on “the rez,” as they usually call it.
Bill (Jojo Bapteise Whiting) is 23, an easy-going, good-hearted, face-tatted father of two who roams looking to make a buck (be it through poodle-breeding or driving sex workers home for men who want to keep their wives in the dark) and regularly leaves his baby mamas hanging. Matho (Ladainian Crazy Thunder) is 12, a quiet but audacious boy always up to no good as a result of his absent, meth-addicted father.
Their narratives don’t overlap, but they find a flow in each other through shared setting, context, mood, and theme.
The stories aren’t plotless but the emphasis isn’t on any narrative conflict. Keough and Gammell make it more about witnessing the culturally and spiritually rich world of Pine Ridge—a place and people not often seen onscreen.
The interconnected everyday lives of the Natives on the reservation and socio-economic degradation wrought by long history of institutionalized oppression.
The former is drawn out through the familial nature of the Natives: the charming, patient, generous aunties who keep everything afloat, or the way everyone lovingly and hilariously gives each other a hard time, which is just delightful.
The latter is tactfully spotlit through things like Bill’s stint working under the table for an ominously short-spoken wealthy white farm owner or the dark reality of Matho having to be fully responsible for himself as a child.
Ultimately, it’s about yearning for belonging—in the case of War Pony and Indigenous artists, belonging to a culture and cinema.
War Pony premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.