Why Wendy and Lucy remains a vital piece of… | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

Why Wendy and Lucy remains a vital piece of Amer­i­can cinema

01 Mar 2017

Words by Joel Blackledge

A young boy wearing a checked shirt and backpack, walking through a wooded area with dappled sunlight filtering through the trees.
A young boy wearing a checked shirt and backpack, walking through a wooded area with dappled sunlight filtering through the trees.
Kel­ly Reichardt’s low-key anti-dra­ma from 2008 offers a sober­ing look at pover­ty in small town USA.

While the past decade has ush­ered in a whole ros­ter of inno­v­a­tive Amer­i­can indie film­mak­ers, few bod­ies of work are so con­sis­tent­ly first-rate as that of Kel­ly Reichardt. Qui­et­ly and steadi­ly, her name has become a short­hand for a par­tic­u­lar brand of film­mak­ing that inter­ro­gates America’s past and present with rare insight and intel­lect. Her new film, Cer­tain Women, is her third col­lab­o­ra­tion with Michelle Williams, a fruit­ful actor-direc­tor pair­ing that began with the min­i­mal­ist mas­ter­piece Wendy and Lucy, from 2008.

The itin­er­ant Wendy (Williams) lives out of her car with her dog Lucy. They are head­ing north to Alas­ka in search of work in a salmon can­nery. The car breaks down, strand­ing them in a poor Ore­gon town, and then Lucy goes miss­ing. With finan­cial prob­lems mount­ing up, Wendy is left at the mer­cy of the local res­i­dents, whose own kind­ness­es and cru­el­ties have a dis­pro­por­tion­ate impact on the vul­ner­a­ble traveler.

While any film involv­ing a lost dog sounds primed to tug at the heart­strings, both the sto­ry and its telling are point­ed­ly undra­mat­ic. In an ear­ly scene, Wendy is has­sled by an aged secu­ri­ty guard for sleep­ing in the car park. But this is no vin­dic­tive author­i­ty fig­ure – rather he is sym­pa­thet­ic and help­ful, as he knows some­thing about eco­nom­ic hard­ship. Lat­er the two bond, almost hud­dling togeth­er beneath the win­dow­less con­crete wall he guards, observ­ing the slow, qui­et demise of a small town.

Wendy shoplifts dog food and is caught by a teenage shop assis­tant who self-right­eous­ly insists on the rule of law – to the qui­et regret of the more world-weary man­ag­er. Wendy is arrest­ed and released – a process char­ac­terised by bore­dom and bureau­cra­cy – in the mean­time los­ing her mon­ey, her dog, and the oppor­tu­ni­ty to fix her car. The shop assis­tant is lat­er seen get­ting picked up by his moth­er as he leaves work; this tiny, oth­er­wise unre­mark­able detail speaks vol­umes about the mean­ing of free­dom in a soci­ety organ­ised so com­plete­ly around privilege.

Even­tu­al­ly Wendy vis­its the local mechan­ic, who instead of fix­ing the car declares it a write-off. Wendy has to let go of the one thing that would enable her to leave the town, but she doesn’t argue. She knows it would be use­less to direct her ire at the mechan­ic. Like the secu­ri­ty guard who moves her, the shop assis­tant who detains her, and the police who arrest her, he’s just doing his job. Yet how can a sys­tem where every­one works as they should leaves some so dispossessed?

The film was shot on a mere $200,000 with a bare bones cast and crew (includ­ing Reichardt’s own dog Lucy in the title role). This doesn’t equate to a com­pro­mised vision, though. The style is sim­ple but con­sid­ered, and while Reichardt draws on social real­ist cin­e­mas from both Italy and the UK, the film car­ries a stonewashed aes­thet­ic that is dis­tinct­ly Amer­i­can. The per­for­mances are nat­u­ral­is­tic and the loca­tions unor­na­ment­ed. Reichardt even for­goes a musi­cal score in favour of the sound of pass­ing trains.

On this foun­da­tion­al real­ism Reichardt con­structs an authen­tic, com­pas­sion­ate sto­ry of which Williams is a vital com­po­nent. She appears con­vinc­ing­ly weary from life on the road, hold­ing back a tor­rent of exhaus­tion behind an expres­sion of strained accep­tance. Wendy is an eco­nom­ic migrant pushed to seek out a job that doesn’t require an address or a qual­i­fi­ca­tion, and that might pay enough to buy her some of the free­dom her coun­try claims to stock in such great supply.

Beyond this, though, we’re not shown any­thing by way of a back­sto­ry. Our view of events is lim­it­ed to just a few days, and when Wendy vis­its the local pound in search of Lucy, a steady track­ing shot of all the oth­er lost dogs serves to remind us of the mil­lions more Wendys in small towns across Amer­i­ca. Indeed, though it doesn’t lean on a par­tic­u­lar ide­ol­o­gy, this is a fierce­ly polit­i­cal film in which the stakes of pol­i­tics are the every­day lived expe­ri­ence: dol­lar bills exchanged between hands, a blank form wait­ing to be filled, or the aisle of a super­mar­ket where shop­pers do men­tal arith­metic to fig­ure out what they can go with­out this week.

Wendy and Lucy lays bare the real­i­ty that pover­ty is a con­di­tion of cir­cum­stance rather than char­ac­ter, and that empa­thy, backed by a degree of out­rage, is the only appro­pri­ate response.

You might like

Accessibility Settings

Text

Applies the Open Dyslexic font, designed to improve readability for individuals with dyslexia.

Applies a more readable font throughout the website, improving readability.

Underlines links throughout the website, making them easier to distinguish.

Adjusts the font size for improved readability.

Visuals

Reduces animations and disables autoplaying videos across the website, reducing distractions and improving focus.

Reduces the colour saturation throughout the website to create a more soothing visual experience.

Increases the contrast of elements on the website, making text and interface elements easier to distinguish.