
Barbara Loden, writer, director, and star of WANDA chose a very bold introduction
to the main character. The first thing we see of Loden is her hands protruding from
underneath a white bedsheet. She slowly pulls the sheet off herself and sits up. At this
moment we don’t see Barbara Loden, the beautiful blonde Hollywood star, we see
Wanda, the disheveled woman with hair in disarray covering some of her face. As she
rubs her eyes we can already tell that she is a woman under some type of stress. The
scene cuts to an extreme wide shot that slowly zooms to a wide shot of the rural mining
landscape where the film is set. Wanda, dressed in all white, looks ghostly against the
dark and dirty hills behind her. Wanda, strolling casually along, is actually on her way to
court for a custody hearing with her ex-husband.
Inside the courtroom, Wanda is absent while the judge calls her name. Wanda’s
husband then tells the judge how irresponsible and unreliable she is. Wanda is unable to
defend herself because as we see, the scene cuts to outside the courtroom. Wanda stands
outside smoking a cigarette when she should be inside facing the judge. I believe that
this is Barbara Loden’s strongest example of Wanda’s character. Without any dialogue
from Wanda we are shown how careless she is when facing something as greatly
important as a custody hearing for her children. When she finally does she speak to the
judge her answers are not too shocking based on what we’ve already seen. Wanda
pathetically tells the judge that if her husband wants a divorce then “you should just give
it to him.” This scene is based on Barbara Loden’s inspiration for the film. Loden was
inspired by the newspaper story of a woman who accompanied her husband on a crime
spree and was arrested and convicted. When the judge sentenced her to prison the woman
replied “Thank you.”
Another moment that Loden uses appearance and body language to effectively
develop Wanda is at the shopping mall. Wanda strolls through the mall aimlessly until
she stops and looks at a store window display. Wanda is looking at the clothes on display
but it is the mannequins who stand out in the scene. Wearing blonde wigs and positioned
directly behind Loden’s profile, there is a striking resemblance between the inanimate
dolls and Wanda. It is not hard to make the connection that Wanda sadly carries herself
as though she were a mannequin, lifeless and emotionless. The world sees her beauty but
nothing below the surface.
This film has many similarities with the famous “Road movies” of the 1960’s and
70’s. The typical road movie involved a pair travelling together in a car either on the run
from the law or just looking for an adventure. Wanda appears to be a road movie because
of the relationship between Mr. Dennis and Wanda and how they travel around in his car
committing crimes. It almost resembles the classic Bonnie and Clyde. Where Wanda
differs from these classic road movies is in the portrayal of Wanda herself. The road trip
that she takes with Mr. Dennis seems to have no point to it at all. Wanda, not having
anything better to do with herself, just gets dragged along by Mr. Dennis for obvious
reasons. The two characters do not have a good relationship and are not working toward
any major goal other than bank robbery. In Bonnie and Clyde where the characters and
their crimes are romanticized, Wanda plays out as a tragedy where the main character is
swept into a dangerous crime spree by a controlling and abusive man. There is no
romance for Wanda. Only a series of episodes where she exposes herself to be controlled
and used by the men around her.
In the final act of the film Mr. Dennis and Wanda take a bank managers family
hostage while Mr. Dennis tries to rob the bank. The climax of the bank robbery is when
Mr. Dennis is shot and killed by the police. Wanda, who was supposed to be the getaway
driver, arrives late as usual. When she approaches the bank she sees a crowd forming
outside. She tries to walk into the bank but is held back by a policeman. With a shaky
camera, shot from behind the outstretched arm of a police officer, this shot closely
resembles a TV news camera reporting from the scene of the crime. This is the most
obvious example of the documentary style brought to the film by cinematographer
Nicholas Proferes.
Wanda differs from a typical slow film in the sense that Barbara Loden left the
characters in the film totally ambiguous. There is no explanation as to why Wanda is
divorced or why she decides to go on the road with Mr. Dennis. We also have no
explanation as to what happens to her at the end. Will she continue her pursuit of nothing
or has she learned a lesson from her crime spree with Mr. Dennis? The audience is left to
draw their own conclusions and this is difficult because Loden has not left us with the
information we need to understand Wanda. Wanda is a character that is not slow but
almost inanimate. She floats around from man to man like paper on a breeze
Thanks for this! One of my great regrets is not seeing this movie and now after reading this, I’m even more determined to somehow see it!! Loved the image of the mannequins!!!! About 15 or 20 years ago, The Searchers was shown on the big screen due to Martin Scorsese, as you know he’s big fan of Ford’s films. The cinematography was truly breathtaking! I wish I liked westerns more, I blame this on the fact that my brothersthey always won the television wars!