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Blood and oil…
DIRECTOR Martin Scorsese STARRING Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Lily Gladstone, Jesse Plemons, Cara Jade Myers SCREENPLAY Eric Roth, Martin Scorsese DISTRIBUTOR Apple RUNNING TIME 206 mins
SEE THIS IF YOU LIKED
GANGS OF NEW YORK 2002
Scorsese and DiCaprio’s earlier expansive exploration of America’s violent past.
CERTAIN WOMEN 2016
Lily Gladstone’s breakout earned her multiple awards nods; expect more to follow for Moon.
THE LOST CITY OF Z 2016
Another starry period epic based on a non-fiction book by David Grann.
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★★★★★ OUT 20 OCTOBER CINEMAS
Coyote wants money,’ Mollie (Lily Gladstone), a young Osage Nation woman, notes sagely when feckless WW1 returnee Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) starts courting her in early 1920s Oklahoma, the setting for Martin Scorsese’s period epic. He’s a former infantry cook with no cash or discernible talent; she’s a wealthy owner of headrights (the inherited mineral rights to oil-rich Osage County) who understands the motives of the lascivious white men tumbling off the train in town trying to marry so-called ‘full-bloods’.
Ernest may project vulpine avarice (‘I just love money!’ he admits repeatedly) but Mollie might as well fall for him as any of them; after all, her sisters are all ‘blanket’ wives to unscrupulous layabouts, and the disenfranchisement of First Nation people is operating on an industrial scale. A tribal generation is being eradicated and stolen from via widespread conspiracy and murder - a movement spearheaded by local white ‘saviour’ William ‘King’ Hale (Robert De Niro), who masks his insidious imperialism with benefactions and a performative love for the Osage, whom he describes as ‘the most beautiful people in the world’.
Torn between faithfulness to her beau and terror at the devastation happening on her own lands, Mollie hopes that authorities outside of the complicit local cops might be able to stop the killing of people and culture. But as one observer notes: ‘Gotta better chance of convicting a guy for kicking a dog than killing an Indian…’
Based on David Grann’s 2017 non-fiction book of the same name, Scorsese’s western (yes, he’s finally made it) delves deep into manifest destiny, greed, racism, neocolonialism and misogyny in a movie that braids together the interests of his past projects. Faith, entitlement, persecution, racketeering, the corrupting influence of money, the disposability of life… all are present in a nailed-on awards magnet that might be some of the best work we’ve ever seen from all involved.
De Niro is sheer understated elegance as Hale, a master-manipulator uncle to dumb pawn Ernest. Peering out of wireframe glasses, he imbues the character with a repulsive righteousness that is mesmerising to watch. DiCaprio, meanwhile, dials down the charisma as an unrepentant, fidgety sad sack. To see two of Marty’s muses spar in front of fireplaces, across dinner tables and in masonic lodges, evoking memories of 1993’s This Boy’s Life, is a genuine thrill.
They’re part of an ensemble that feels vividly period-authentic and unreconstructed. Gladstone is a firebrand as Mollie, her silences as instructive as the way she pulls her blanket around her shoulders. And Jesse Plemons, a third-act arrival as FBI agent Tom White, evinces integrity and kindness in only a handful of scenes. It’s a shame Brendan Fraser (as a pernicious lawyer) didn’t get the memo about subtlety, but his appearance is so fleeting that it’s a minor blip.
Weaving the Tulsa race riots, the KKK and the Masons into its tapestry, Scorsese’s opus questions the misdeeds of America in the last century while linking them to the pressing issues of today. Addressing racial violence, nationalism, the continued epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women and even our lurid obsession with true crime, Killers of the Flower Moon paints a robust picture of a moment in history that invites viewer introspection. As Ernest asks portentously when reading from a book on Osage history: ‘Can you see the wolves in this picture?’ Well, can you?
THE VERDICT Scorsese’s rich, 206-minute, multi-layered epic is worth every second.