Trailers & Videos

Official Trailer

How Lily Gladstone’s Lived Experience on Reservation informed ‘Fancy Dance’

Another Take: Lily Gladstone, Isabel DeRoy-Olson and Erica Tremblay

Comparing Scenes: Fancy Dance & Killers of the Flower Moon with Lily Gladstone

A Love Letter to Indigenous Women — Lily Gladstone & Isabel Deroy-Olson
Cast

Shea Whigham
Frank

Audrey Wasilewski
Nancy

Crystle Lightning
Sapphire

Tamara Podemski
Ricky

Patrice Fisher
Ruth

Jason Alan Smith
FBI Agent

Dennis Newman
Derrick

Arianne Martin
Donna Marsh

Blake Blair
Tanner

Colleen Elizabeth Miller
Server

Cory Hart
ICE Agent Lewis

P.J. Sosko
Night Manger
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Reviews
Brent Marchant
It’s frustrating to watch a movie that gets most everything right but ends up going off the rails when it really counts. Such is the case with writer-director Erica Tremblay’s third feature outing about a Native American woman (Lily Gladstone) from Oklahoma’s Seneca-Cayuga Reservation who goes in search of her missing sister (Hauli Gray) at the Grand Nations Powwow in Oklahoma City with her 13-year-old niece (Isabel Deroy-Olson) in tow. But the duo’s road trip odyssey soon turns into a statewide crime-ridden misadventure not unlike the narrative in “Thelma & Louise” (1991). Much of this multilayered tale is actually carried off quite skillfully, spotlighting the challenges that indigenous people (especially women) face and presenting a story with a capably executed, tension-filled, edge-of-your-seat quality, prompting viewers to wonder what’s coming next. However, as the story wears on, it becomes increasingly implausible, culminating in a climax that’s more than a little difficult to believe, its heartfelt sentiments notwithstanding. There are also some intriguing back story elements scattered throughout that, quite frankly, could have been better developed and resolved. That’s indeed a shame, considering how these shortcomings undermine the production’s many strong points. These weaknesses also take away from the outstanding performances of Gladstone (who turns in even better work here than in her Oscar-nominated role in “Killers of the Flower Moon” (2023)) and Deroy-Olson in her big screen debut, as well as an outstanding cast of supporting players. This AppleTV+ original truly has a lot in its favor, but it’s unfortunate that it didn’t carry through on its strengths throughout the entire film. A near hit but one that doesn’t live up to its promise or potential.
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