Daily Press

Storytelli­ng on Navajo mystery series ‘Dark Winds’ ‘inside job’

- By Lynn Elber

Robert Redford and George R.R. Martin are the big names behind “Dark Winds,” but they’re not the most important.

That distinctio­n belongs to the Native American creators and actors who ensured the AMC mystery series rings true to the Native experience and enduring culture, which largely has been snubbed or recklessly caricature­d by Hollywood.

This time the storytelli­ng is “an inside job,” said director Chris Eyre, resulting in what he describes as a “Native American, Southweste­rn film noir.”

Based on Tony Hillerman’s admired novels featuring Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee of the Navajo Tribal Police, AMC’s

“Dark Winds” puts the newly teamed lawmen on a double-murder case that could be linked to a brazen armored-car heist.

The investigat­ion and what underlies it is gripping but, as with Hillerman’s books, what distinguis­hes “Dark Winds” is its intricate blend of nuanced characters and relationsh­ips, spiritual traditions and the devastatin­g toll of entrenched inequality.

The last aspect is painfully illustrate­d by a midwife’s warning to a pregnant woman to avoid a hospital birth or risk unwanted sterilizat­ion, a reflection of what Native Americans faced in the series’ 1970s setting, the producers said. (A 1976

U.S. General Accounting Office study found that women younger than 21 were being sterilized despite a moratorium, among other issues.)

“A lot of our history is based on oral tradition, said Zahn McClarnon, who stars as Lt. Leaphorn.

“We’ve been telling our stories for thousands of years . ... I think that the television business is finally seeing that, and realizing that we have our own stories, and that they’re rich, deep stories.”

“Dark Winds” — airing Sundays on AMC and streaming on AMC+ — is imbued with the stark grandeur of New Mexico, where it’s largely set and was shot. The series counts actor-filmmaker Redford and Martin, of “Game of Thrones” book and TV fame, among its executive producers. “Dark Winds” also boasts a nearly all Native writing staff, with one exception. Eyre (“Friday Night Lights,” “Smoke Signals”) directed the full series, and creator and executive producer Graham Roland is Chickasaw.

The cast features prominent Native actors including McClarnon; Kiowa Gordon as Chee; Jessica Matten as police Sgt. Bernadette Manuelito, and Deanna Allison as Leaphorn’s wife, Emma.

Their resumes and performanc­es refute longstandi­ng industry complaints about a lack of experience­d Native actors.

“I’ve heard that excuse before,” said Roland.

“What we found when we went about casting this was the Native talent pool is a lot deeper than even I realized . ... Everybody in the show is amazing.”

Roland (“Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” “Fringe”) was connected with the proposed series in 2019, before the recent boomlet of Native-inclusive shows such as “Reservatio­n

Dogs” and “Rutherford Falls.”

“What was unique about it was the opportunit­y to tell a story in the Native community without a white character bringing you into the community and experienci­ng it through the white character’s point of view,” Roland said. Instead, the perspectiv­e is that of the Native character “who grew up there, lived there and polices that environmen­t.”

The decision to leave the story in the 20th century proved the right one for Eyre and Roland.

“When you drill down into the soil of the reservatio­n proper ... there are places that don’t have electricit­y to this day. There are communitie­s that don’t have water, that don’t have cell service,” Eyre said. “It’s ironic that so much has changed, and so little has changed.”

 ?? MICHAEL MORIATIS/AMC ?? Kiowa Gordon, left, and Zahn McClarnon in “Dark Winds,” based on Tony Hillerman’s novels.
MICHAEL MORIATIS/AMC Kiowa Gordon, left, and Zahn McClarnon in “Dark Winds,” based on Tony Hillerman’s novels.

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