Whale Rider
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 13 June 2003
Seattle International Film Festival
2003
Legacies
"There
was no gladness when I was born." Whale Rider begins
with tragedy. Noisy tragedy. A woman gives birth to two children,
one stillborn. As her husband, Porourangi (Cliff Curtis), watches
helplessly, she dies in the process, leaving him bereft, angry, and
confronted by his own father, Koro (Rawiri Paratene), ready to blame
the surviving child, a daughter, for the death of the male child.
Porourangi storms off, leaving the baby to the care of his mother,
Nanny Flowers (Vicky Haughton). Fortunately, she knows how to handle
her husband in ways that even he doesn't imagine.
All
this happens in a couple of minutes, and the rest of the film takes
place some eleven years later, when Pai (the astonishing Keisha
Castle-Hughes) has grown into an inquisitive, courageous, and
self-sufficient girl. She's living with her grandparents in a
Whangara community on the eastern coast of New Zealand. Named for a
demi-god ancestor, Paikea, who arrived in New Zealand on the back of
a whale, Pai is not the first-born son who has the chance to be the
next Whangara chieftain. According to tradition, no girl can even
aspire to such a fate. Pai will prove that such thinking is
hopelessly backwards, as she is, indeed and in spite of her
self-doubts shaped by her grandfather's prejudice, the future
chieftain.
Based
on the novel by Maori author Witi Ihimaera and adapted by director
Niki Caro, Whale Rider is part saga and part fairy tale, part
kids' adventure tale and part poignant coming-of-age story, part,
part girl power drama and part adult life lesson. It's all these
things, as well as a rousing good time -- with beautiful beachscapes
and stunning whales a-swimming imagery by cinematographer Leon
Narbey, and yet maintains an elegant, simple-seeming narrative
structure.
Pai
comes into her own by learning her lessons at school (she must write
a speech about her ancestors) as well as learning the skills of a
Maori warrior. In this she is the conventional good and gallant
girl, but also something of a bad girl, in the sense that boys get
to be bad as they seek their heroic fates. She undertakes her
education on the sly, because Koro teaches the skills class -- for
boys only. Still, she is gifted and eager, ensuring that it's only a
matter of time before traditional expectations will be overturned.
The
film works by developing relationships between characters -- which
means between generations and between individuals, across cultures
and over oceans of bad feelings. Porourangi returns from Europe,
where he's been selling and showing his art, making a living off his
translations of his traditional culture. (Koro passes predictable
judgment: "You call it work, but it's not work. It's
souvenirs.") Perhaps out of his own resentment, Porourangi lets
slip that he has a white, pregnant girlfriend. Furious, Koro cruelly
turns his anger at the nearest, easiest, most vulnerable target,
Pai, who overhears his pointless derision from the next room. The
ensuing crisis involves a touching reunion between father and
daughter, during which both parties assume her maturity beyond her
years.
"I
can't be what he wants," sighs Porourangi. "Me
neither," Pai astutely adds, huddled under a blanket her father
has brought outside to soothe her chill as they look out on the sea.
This conversation leads to a (quickly reversed) decision that Pai
should return to Europe with her father, but it is more important
for the frank and persistent respect it pays to Pai as a character,
and to her childish intelligence and intuition more generally. She's
not so much charismatic or adorable (though you might call her
either), as she is resilient, exquisite, and worthy. During the
scenes where she secretly studies the warriors' skills -- and begins
to outstrip her boy peers, in fighting and swimming -- she surely
makes a spirited and heartening figure.
But
while the film engenders enthusiasm for her mythic abilities and her
imminent fate, it also makes her rather like an ordinary girl. And
that's her great strength and significance. Pai is thoughtful and
serious, but attuned to a kind of vibrant rhythm (imaged here in her
affiliation with the whales, but also having to do with the sea, and
more abstractly, life cycles, breathing, and blood flow) that kids
tend to feel better than adults. Think of all the images of girls in
U.S. pop movies -- so halter-topped, so perfectly coiffed and
appointed, so self-consciously cute, so Mary-Kate-and-Ashleyed. Pai
is none of that but much more. She is wholly engaging and elegant,
on her own terms.
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Written and
Directed
by:
Niki Caro
Starring:
ha Castle-Hughes
Rawiri Paratene
Vicky Haughton
Cliff Curtis
Grant Roa
Mana Taumaunu
Rachel House
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate
for children under 13.
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