Dances with Wolves
Directed by Kevin Costner
- Produced by Jim Wilson, Kevin
Costner
- Written by Michael Blake
- Starring Kevin Costner, Mary
McDonnell, Graham Greene, and Rodney Grant
- Music by John Barry
- Cinematography Dean Semler
- Distributed by Orion Pictures
- Release date(s) November 9, 1990
- Running time 181 Mins (Theatrical),
236 Mins Director's Cut
- Country U.S.
- Language English, Lakota
Dances with Wolves
is an Academy award winning 1990 epic film which tells the story of a
United States cavalry officer from the Civil War who travels alone
into the frontier near a Sioux tribe. Developed by director/star Kevin
Costner over 5 years, the film (released 21 November 1990) has high
production values and won 7 Academy Awards (1990) and the Golden Globe
Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama. Much of the dialogue is in the
Lakota language with English subtitles, unusual for a film at the time
of its release.
In 2007, Dances with Wolves
was selected for preservation in the United States National Film
Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally,
historically, or aesthetically significant".
Plot
The film opens during a lull in a
battle of the US Civil War. Union Army Officer Lieutenant John J.
Dunbar has learned that his injured leg is to be amputated. Seeing the
plight of fellow soldiers with amputated legs, Dunbar decides to
attempt suicide by riding a horse across the line of fire, between the
opposing Union and Confederate positions.
His action has the unexpected effect
of rallying his comrades, who then storm the Confederate positions.
After the ensuing battle, Dunbar is named a hero by his commanding
officer, and his leg is saved by the general's surgeon, who is more
experienced. He is offered his choice of next posting, and given
Cisco, the horse who carried him.
Dunbar requests a transfer to the
western frontier. After meeting with a major (Maury Chaykin) who has
slipped into delusions of grandeur (He apparently thinks he is a king,
and Dunbar a medieval knight.) he is paired with a Teamster named
Timmons (Robert Pastorelli) who would take him to his post. He arrives
with fresh post supplies at the desolate Fort Sedgewick, and finds it
deserted except for a lone wolf, whom Dunbar befriends and dubs Two
Socks, on account of the coloring of his front legs. Dunbar sets
himself to clean up and set in order the deserted post, while waiting
for reinforcements to arrive.
Dunbar eventually encounters the
local Sioux-Lakota American Indian tribe. (In the book, Dunbar
interacts with the Comanche.) Some Sioux youths hear that Dunbar is at
the old fort and attempt to capture Cisco in order to become heroes.
Dunbar's horse escapes by pulling off the rider holding onto his
bridle, and returns to the post. This happens again later when several
adult members of the tribe try to take the horse, but the man holding
the horse's reins is again pulled off and the horse escapes.
Dunbar now believes that his wait was
for nothing and decides to go to the Sioux village to talk but
discovers an injured European American woman named Stands With A Fist,
who is wearing Indian clothing, and speaking only the Lakota language.
When she was a child (initially called Christine), her family was
slaughtered by Pawnee Indians but she was later rescued by the
medicine man Kicking Bird.
Incidentally, she earned her name in
her youth when she punched out a tormentor and challenged any comers.
Dunbar returns the woman to the tribe for treatment. Initially the
Sioux are suspicious and wary, but begin to accept Dunbar after they
visit the fort and begin simple communication. Eventually a dialogue
is opened when Kicking Bird asks Stands With A Fist to translate
between him and Dunbar.
Meanwhile, the teamster Timmons,
while returning to the point of departure, is ambushed by Pawnee
Indians and scalped.
Dunbar finds himself more and more
drawn to the lifestyle and customs of his Indian neighbors. He becomes
a hero among the Sioux, and is accepted as an honorary member of the
tribe after he helps the Sioux to locate a large migrating herd of
buffalo, on which they are dependent as a source of nourishment,
supplies, and clothing. Dunbar also helps defend the settlement
against a Pawnee raiding party, providing the Sioux warriors with
surplus rifles and ammunition from the fort.
He eventually is accepted as a full
member of the tribe, and is named Shu-mani-tu-tonka Ob' Wa-chi
(the eponymous "Dances with Wolves"), after the scouts
witnessed him frolicking with Two Socks, the wolf that follows Dunbar.
He then marries Stands With A Fist and spends more time communing with
the tribe than manning his post at Fort Sedgwick.
Dunbar's idyll ends when he must tell
Kicking Bird that white men will continue to invade their land in
numbers like the stars. They tell Chief Ten Bears, who decides it is
time to move the village to its winter camp. As the final packing
finishes, Dunbar realizes that his journal, left behind at the
deserted fort, is a blueprint for finding the Sioux.
It also reveals that he knows far too
much about their ways. He returns to retrieve it, but finds Fort
Sedgwick is re-occupied by reinforcing Army troops, who arrest and
beat him as a deserter. Afterwards he is escorted by Army Officers and
troopers away from Sedgwick. They happen upon Two Socks and the
soldiers start taking pot shots at him (which Dunbar tries to prevent)
eventually killing him when he wouldn't leave because he is faithful
to Dunbar. Soon after a rescue party attacks the column of men. He is
rescued by Wind In His Hair and other warriors from the tribe, as well
as Smiles A Lot who later finds Dunbar's journal floating away in a
stream.
After returning to the winter camp
Dunbar realizes that as a deserter and fugitive, if he stays with the
Sioux he will continue to draw the unwelcome attention of the Army,
and endanger the welfare of the tribe. Dunbar decides that he must
leave the tribe, saying he must speak to those who would listen. His
new wife accompanies him.
As Dunbar/Dances With Wolves and
Stands With A Fist leave the camp they hear Wind In His Hair cry out
that Dances with Wolves will always be his friend. A short time later
a column of cavalry and Indian scouts arrive to find their former camp
site empty.
- Kevin Costner as Lt. John J.
Dunbar/Dances With Wolves
- Mary McDonnell as Stands With A
Fist
- Graham Greene as Kicking Bird
- Rodney A. Grant as Wind In His
Hair
- Floyd Red Crow Westerman as Chief
Ten Bears
- Tantoo Cardinal as Black Shawl
- Jimmy Herman as Stone Calf
- Charles Rocket as Lt. Elgin
- Robert Pastorelli as Timmons
- Larry Joshua as Sgt. Bauer
- Tony Pierce as Spivey Tom Everett
as Sgt. Pepper
- Maury Chaykin as Maj. Fambrough
Awards
- Won:
- Academy Award for Best Picture
Andreas Nordbψ, Jim Wilson and Kevin Costner
- Academy Award for Directing
Kevin Costner
- Academy Award for Writing
Adapted Screenplay Michael Blake
- Academy Award for Best
Cinematography Dean Semler
- Academy Award for Film Editing
Neil Travis
- Academy Award for Sound
Russell Williams II, Jeffrey Perkins, Bill W. Benton, and
Gregory H. Watkins
- Academy Award for Original
Music Score John Barry
- Golden Globe Award for Best
Motion Picture - Drama Jim Wilson and Kevin Costner
- Nominated:
- Academy Award for Best Actor
Kevin Costner
- Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actor Graham Greene
- Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actress Mary McDonnell
- Academy Award for Best Art
Direction Jeffrey Beecroft and Lisa Dean
- Academy Award for Costume
Design Elsa Zamparelli
Play Dances with Wolves
Trivia
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