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7 Women (1966) (aka Seven Women)
In director John Ford's female-centric MGM drama -
his last feature film (obscure and mis-appreciated) and a box-office
failure, with the taglines: "Love-Lust Courage and Cowardice
Faith-Fury and Sacrifice!", and "Seven Who Defied What
No Man Dared, Each for a Reason that Was Hers - Alone!":
- the setting: rural northern China in 1935, at a
remote Christian missionary outpost and clinic staffed almost entirely
by women (four at first):
- Miss Agatha Andrews (Margaret Leighton), the
strict, rigidly-pious, repressed, self-righteous, close-minded,
and puritanical head principal of the mission; also lesbian-leaning
- Miss Jane Argent (Mildred Dunnock), Miss Andrews' obedient,
spinsterish assistant
- Emma Clark (Sue Lyon), a young, blonde, demure, pretty,
and impressionable mission worker, inexperienced about life
- Florrie Pether (Betty Field), the middle-aged, nervous,
pregnant wife of mousy mission teacher husband Charles Pether
(Eddie Albert), a momma's boy
- the entrance scene of Dr. D.R. Cartwright (Anne Bancroft)
through the mission's gates - the newly-arrived American doctor from
NY, on horseback, who turned to reveal that she was an emancipated,
secular female - short-haired and slightly manly (and androgynous),
wearing pants and brown leather jacket and hat; also she was a chain-smoker,
drinker, profanity-spewer, possibly atheist (definitely anti-religious),
independent minded, and not used to saying grace at meals
- the scene of Dr. Cartwright's free-thinking dining
room lecture, when she entered late carrying a bottle of alcohol,
and pounded it onto the table: "What you all need is a good
- stiff - drink!...Oh, come on, Agatha. It's good Scotch whiskey.
It would do us all a world of good"; furthermore, she described
her poor career and heartbreaking personal choices (in a world of
injustice) to everyone seated at the table: "Normal? What the
hell is so normal about my life? It took me eight years to become
a doctor; I gave everything up to study. And for what? Anything I
could get. There are no tough jobs for women doctors. I couldn't
even open a decent office; I had to sweat it out in the worst hospitals.
And when I finally gave myself a little time, for a little love,
I wound up pickin' the wrong guy. What do ya think of that, Binnsy?
Oh well. It was nice while it lasted. But for keeps, he preferred
his wife. So what's normal about that? As a matter of fact, what
the hell is so normal about any one of us nuts sittin' at
this table?"; she also offered advice to young Emma: "You
know, Emma, you're the only one that still has a chance. There's
a real world outside. Get out of this rat-race; go and find it"
- the build-up of conflict between the very unwelcomed
Dr. Cartwright and the authoritarian and unyielding Andrews, and
their competition to influence Emma and gain her support; Agatha
cautioned Emma about Cartwright's different, spiritually-dead and
'evil' nature: "Smoking? Sitting before grace? Using profane
words? You call that interesting? I can see you're a young, inexperienced
girl. There's something exciting about her. But morally, spiritually,
she's dead....The difference is the evil in her"
- the emergency arrival of three additional women: British
survivors of a Mongolian warlord attack: Miss Binns (Flora Robson),
Mrs. Russell (Anna Lee), and Chinese-born Miss Ling (Jane Chang),
a mission teacher and translator
- the difficult conditions surrounding Cartwright's
supervision of a cholera epidemic, necessitating a quarantine, burning
infected clothing, long hours of treating the afflicted, and burying
the dead
- the ominous approach of lawless, warlord chieftain
Tunga Khan (Mike Mazurki) and his gun-wielding militia of marauding
barbaric bandits, who symbolically announced their imminent arrival
by the glow on the horizon of a burned-down town
- the deadly entry of Khan's group, signaled by a honking
car horn, through the mission gates, to take over the mission, and
the dramatic lethal shooting of Kim (Hans William Lee), the head
of the mission's male labor force, in front of everyone; Kim had
just described the murder of heroic-acting and tragically brave Charles
who had tried to prevent a rape; the outlaws then executed all of
the Chinese in the mission (including women and children)
- the self-sacrificial choice of the stoic and fearless
Dr. Cartwright (called "the whore of Babylon" by Andrews
during a temper tantrum) to offer herself up as sexual "ransom",
in order to negotiate for and receive better treatment and provisions
for all, including Florrie's newly-arriving baby
- the internal power struggle over Dr. Cartwright between
Khan and his "lean" lieutenant Warrior (Woody Strode),
culminating in a wrestling duel-match between the two bare-chested
fighters - and the brutal breaking of the Warrior's neck by Khan
during the hand-to-hand combat as the nighttime's entertainment
- the final grim sequence of Dr. Cartwright agreeing
to sell herself permanently to Khan as his subservient concubine,
in order to free the other 'seven women' - she dressed in the exotic
costume of a Chinese geisha/courtesan, and then glided through the
mission's central dark corridor into the presence of her captive
master Khan's bedroom, with a bottle of powdered poison tucked in
her waist sash; she secretly poisoned two water cups, then bowed
in mock submission and defiant subservience as she presented him
with one of the tainted cups - she toasted him as they clinked cups: "So
long, ya bastard!"; he soon fell forward, dead, next to her;
then, she also drank from her cup, angrily threw it to the ground
where it smashed into pieces, and leaned back to approach death herself
- as the film slowly faded to black and ended
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