Spirit of the Wind | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ralph Liddle |
Produced by | Ralph Liddle Kent Gibson (associate producer) |
Written by | Ralph Liddle John Logue |
Starring |
Chief Dan George Slim Pickens Pius Savage George Clutesi |
Music by |
Will Ackerman Buffy Sainte-Marie |
Cinematography | John Logue |
Edited by | Mark Goldblatt |
Release date
|
1979 |
Running time
|
98 minutes (USA) 93 minutes (France) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Spirit of the Wind (or Attla) is a 1979 American Northern film directed by Ralph Liddle.
The movie is a semi-biographical story based upon the early life and rise to prominence of Native American dog musher George Attla, Jr. (1933–2015). Attla, known as "the Huslia Hustler," took his nickname from one of his mentors, Jimmy Huntington, who first began winning races during Attla's childhood. In recent generations, this nickname has become associated with Attla far more than with Huntington. Attla was a leading star of the 1960s and 1970s in the sport of sprint dog sled racing. He won the Fur Rendezvous World Championship race, held in Anchorage, Alaska, 10 times between 1958 and 1982. He also won 8 championships in the Open North American Championship race, held in Fairbanks, Alaska. In addition, despite his mushing experience being geared more towards sprint than distance racing, Attla competed in the inaugural Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in 1973, placing fifth. In a 2011 interview, Attla spoke of the popularity of the Iditarod, and how sprint racing "is now a second-class sport" as a result.
The general theme of the story centered around Attla's rivalry with the other leading sprint competitors of the day, fellow Alaska Native Gareth Wright (the brother of political gadfly Don Wright and grandfather of modern-day dog musher Ramy Brooks) and Massachusetts musher Roland "Doc" Lombard, the preparations for an upcoming big race, and his first major race victory.
Most of the movie was set and filmed in Fairbanks. A number of local actors, including local Alaska Natives, University of Alaska Fairbanks professor Lee Salisbury, and KFAR disc jockey/newscaster Bill Walley, appear in minor roles.