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Set in 1989 Minnesota, North Country was
inspired by the true story of a woman who led the charge in a court action against her
employer, an iron mining operation, whose male rank-and-file employees deeply
resented--and expressed in crude misbehaviors--the incursion of women into their
traditionally all male bastion. Management resisted taking any action to remedy the
situation and a class action lawsuit for sexual harassment became the first of its kind,
prevailed in the courts and set a new standard and a precedent for employers throughout
the United States.
Screenwriter Michael Seitzman created a fictional character for the
historical one, here Josie Aimes (Charlize Theron), who flees an abusive husband with her
two kids, returning to her parent's home to a mixed reception. Her father, Hank (Richard
Jenkins in a finely understated performance), carries deep shame over Josey's son, born
out of wedlock; single mothers were not exactly au courant in small town America and Hank
assumes Josey to have been promiscuous. But as her sympathetic mother, Alice (Sissy
Spacek) lectures him at one point, "She had a baby, she didn't rob a bank!"
Josie gets a job in a salon, but she is encouraged by her friend, Glory
(Frances McDormand), to apply for work at the iron mine, where she can earn six times what
she does washing hair. Director Niki Caro (Whale
Rider) creates a strong sense of place, with the snowy Minnesota landscape, the
open pit mines where explosives are used to break up the ore, and the noisy, smoky, dusty,
toxic atmosphere of the processing plant.
What follows is a series of harassment incidents, against Josie and
other women miners, ranging from a dildo placed in a lunchbox, to inappropriate groping,
to near rape, as well as non-sexually specific scatological pranks. The men cover up for
one another and the union is nonresponsive, as are supervisors and top level management.
And in small town Minnesota, the resentments spread beyond the workplace into the town
itself, affecting Josie, her parents and her kids. She is determined to survive in the
job--it provides her the independence to buy a house, even if it is one that gives new
meaning to the term "fixer-upper."
Theron, who won an Oscar for the 2003 Monster, recovers here from her dismal
performance in last year's Head
in the Clouds. She is fully credible as a working class mother and a victim who
has the determination to fight back. But, as written and directed, the role is conceived
at such a consistently intense emotional level that the overall effect is diluted. Indeed,
much the same came be said for the film overall. The all too little comic relief comes
from McDormand (City by the Sea,
Almost Famous) who
captures the toughness, the smarts, the sense of humor and the quick mouth of Glory.
The climactic courtroom scene is undermined by poor writing and an
unconvincing performance by Woody Harrelson (The Prize Winner
of Defiance, Ohio, Play
it to the Bone) as Josie's lawyer. And overall, the film is so steeped in
overwrought emotion that it verges on melodrama, rather the the genuine drama that the
content merits.
Still, despite its flaws, North Country delivers a story worth
hearing, a documentation of profound unfairness and the need to challenge abusive
behaviors.
- Arthur Lazere