On the surface (or in isolation from reality) both statements appear to be equally useless for the state goal. However, considering the context, the second statement is clearly more useful.
Statement 2
Let's see what we can extract from the second statement. The ratio of women $w$ among all survived is:
$$w = p x /(p x +(1-p) z) $$
where $p$ - ratio of women among passengers, $x$ and $z$ are probabilities of survival of women and men. The denominator is the total survival rate.
We are testing hypo $H_0:x>z$
Let's re-write the equation to obtain the necessary conditions for $H_0$:
$$(1-w) p x = w (1-p) z$$
$$ x = w (1-p) z/((1-w) p)$$
For $H_0$ to hold we have:
$$ x = w (1-p) z/((1-w) p)>z$$
$$ w (1-p) >(1-w) p $$
$$ 0.9 (1-p) >0.1 p $$
$$ 1-p > p/9 $$
$$p<0.9$$
So, for your hypo that women were more likely to survive, all you need is to check that there were less than 90% women among the passengers. This is consistent with your assumption 2, which seems to imply that $p\approx 1/2$. Hence, I declare that statement 2 all but asserts that women were more likely to survive, i.e. it's quite useful for your goal.
Statement 1
The first statement is truly useless in isolation, but has a limited use in the context. If we pretend we know nothing about the event, then saying that $x=0.9$ tells us nothing about $z$, and whether $x>z$?
However, from that little that I know about the event - I haven't seen the movie - it seems unlikely that $x\le z$. Why?
We know from Assumption 2 that $p\approx 1/2$, so the total survival rate is
$p x+(1-p) z$. If we assume that $x\approx z$ and $p\approx 1/2$ we get
$$p x+(1-p) z\approx x=0.9$$
In other words 90% of all passengers survived, which doesn't ring true to me. Would they make a movie and talk about it for 100 years if 90% of passengers survived? So, it must be that $x>>z$ and less than half of passengers made it.
Conclusion
I'd say that both statements support your hypo that women were more likely to survive than men, but Statement 1 does so rather weakly, while Statement 2 in combination with assumptions almost surely establishes your hypo as a fact.