Then it made sense, because you really do center the women in these stories in way many movies of the genre do not.
It’s almost impossible to imagine a West without women, isn’t it? The West doesn’t carry on without women. And they understand that they were basically trying to keep their families clean and fed, and women were worked to death. And if they lost their man, there’s every opportunity that their life could become something unimaginable, bad. That’s why Sienna [Miller]’s character moves so quickly to bring a man into her life, because she knows how vulnerable she could be, and she doesn’t care about her reputation to do it. And we would taboo that now: That’s too quick, she’s moved too quick.
I am not looking for kudos because women are in it. For me, they’re not in it, they actually dominate the movie, to be honest. Every one of those women dominate when they’re on the screen.
I particularly love the casting of Jena Malone. She brings a totally different energy.
When she whacks Abbey Lee on that hill, just knocks her on the fucking head. [Laughs] It’s great. She’s [playing] a mom. She’s a mom with a guy who’s a salesman, and she’s got a renter who brings in more money than her husband. She’s got a child and she’s living in filth practically. So that’s her setup. And if you let an actress like Jena Malone go? She’s going to go.
This is the first film you’ve directed in about 20 years. Did you feel like a different director, getting back in the chair?
I’ve just always felt like everybody else is a better director than me. I just let them do their thing. That’s what I honestly feel. But when it came time for this, because I’ve done enough movies, I felt like this movie has a tone and it has to be maintained. I don’t know that I could have lived with myself if I saw scenes like where [a female character] is bathing, and somebody said, “We need to cut that out”—because women’s desire to be clean and keep their families clean was utmost. The sensuality or just a plain idea of, “Can I get this dirt off me?” turned into a very sensual moment [in the film] until it was busted by a voyeuristic situation—and we suddenly saw the scene for what it was, which was they ruined it. The minute we realized other men were watching her, we didn’t like it. What does that say? It’s simple: There’s peeping Toms in every decade, every century. There’s abusive people in every decade, every century. We have a lot in common with the people who came West. What we can’t compare, though, is how difficult it was for them. How dangerous.
Do you have a start date for part three yet?
Yeah, I’m three days into it, man. And then I go back. I’m fighting to shoot 10 more days, 12 more days if I can.
Has that fight gotten easier or harder, the deeper you’ve gotten into this?
It’s harder. It’s harder because it’s important to me that it be better that the story completely [works]. That’s why I’m not having to be, “Oh my God, it was successful.” I got to reinvent some story. I know what the story is, but it’s important to me that it just gets better and better.
This interview has been edited and condensed.
Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.