Westerns In March: Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)

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In 2019 HBO released an excellent series called Watchmen. It was not an adaptation of the groundbreaking comic of the same name by Alan Moore but it was set in that universe. The series opens with a depiction of the Tulsa Race Massacre, a historic event in which a group of white men burnt an affluent black neighborhood to the ground after a black man had been accused of assaulting a white woman.

The internet was abuzz about the episode because most of the United States had never heard of the massacre. I grew up in Oklahoma, not thirty miles from Tulsa. I had heard of the massacre but never studied it in school. I believe my Oklahoma History textbooks included the event, but it was never discussed in class. If I’m being generous I’d say that was because we covered the state’s history in chronological order, and we didn’t have time to get that far into it before the school year was up.

I was completely unaware of the Osage Indian Murders until David Gran’s book Killers of the Flower Moon was released in 2017. It makes one wonder how much of our history has been whitewashed or completely erased. Considering what is currently happening in the United States I fear even more will disappear before too long.

Martin Scorsese adapted the book in 2023. My hometown was buzzing with the news of the filming and I tried multiple times to become an extra in it, to no avail. There were Facebook groups that breathlessly reported on every day’s shootings and multiple people showed up every day taking blurry photos of the film’s stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert DeNiro, and Lily Gladstone.

I could not wait to see the film. I caught it opening weekend at Tulsa’s wonderful independent movie house the Circle Cinema. I loved it. It was one of my favorite movies of 2023. I’ve been meaning to watch it again ever since. But it is a long movie and I just now got around to it.

After years of being kicked around the Osage were finally settled on a hard-scrabble chunk of worthless land in North West Oklahoma. It was literally land that no one wanted.

Then they discovered oil.

Amazingly the Osage were able to retain their rights to the land and maintained what were known as headrights. This allowed them to keep their land whilst giving the oil companies the right to drill underneath it. In return, the oil companies gave the Osage regular payments. This made them some of the richest people per capita in the world. For a time.

As it is their way, white men quickly found ways to cheat the Osage out of their money. The government created a system in which Osage could be declared incompetent, allowing white men to oversee their money and decide how it was spent. Naturally, they found ways of spending that money for themselves. Corruption was rampant. A great many Osage were declared incompetent for ridiculous reasons. I read that at least one woman was declared incompetent because she wasn’t spending enough of her money, and therefore didn’t understand its value. Plenty of white folks moved into the area selling goods and services at ridiculously high rates.

And then they started murdering the Osage. At least 60 full-blood Osage were killed between 1918-1931. Killers of the Flower Moon focuses in on one conspiracy led by William King Hale (Robert DeNiro) and his nephew Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio).

As this is already long I’m gonna skip most of the plot details. The basics involve Ernest marrying an Osage woman named Mollie (Lily Gladstone) whose family owns a fortune in headlights. Led by King Hale, Ernest hires various other men to murder most of Mollie’s family pushing more and more money into his control. By the end, he’s poisoning Mollie by adding something nefarious to her daily insulin injections.

It is a horrific, true story about racism, white supremacy, and greed.

The book it is based on is plotted like a murder mystery. We don’t know who is responsible for the murders until the end. It is also a story about the burgeoning Bureau of Investigation, a precursor to the F.B.I.

Originally Scoresese’s movie was going to follow in those same tracks. It would be a mystery, and DiCaprio was set to play the F.B.I. man. but along the way, they realized this was really a story of the Osage. But Scorsese, a rich, white, Catholic Italian from New York is smart enough to realize he is not the person who can truly tell their story. At the same time his privilege as a rich white man, and a decorated director at that, allows him to tell such a tale. In all likelihood, an Osage filmmaker would never be given the funding to make it.

You can feel that tension throughout the film. Scorsese took great pains to consult with many Osage tribespeople, trying to be respectful of their culture and tell their story as best he could. But he also centers it on Ernest, he tells it from his perspective. At the end of the film, Scorsese does something that directly indicates that this is a story told by a white man. Stories like this are important to tell, but we should always be aware of who is telling them.

DiCaprio is brilliant as Ernest. He’s not a particularly intelligent man. To put it bluntly, he’s an idiot. And easily manipulated. King Hale regularly talks him into doing his bidding. There is a question at the heart of the film about whether Ernest loves his wife. I think he does. Of a sort. In DiCaprio’s performance we see him genuinely care for her. Yet he also loves money. On multiple occasions he literally states this. At one point he declares he loves money almost as much as he loves his wife.

I think he is able to compartmentalize the horrible things he is doing and separate them from his feelings for Mollie. He’s also a blatant racist. So killing Native Americans is no big deal to him. Killing Mollie’s sisters is just killing some more Osage and that’s okay. The fact that they are Mollie’s kin, that she loves them, and that their deaths pain her is somehow separated in his mind.

We eventually see some regret rise up in him. He’s willing to poison Mollie because that will “slow her down” and keep her from discovering the truth. But slowly he realizes he’s killing her. Slowly he sees the effect all this murdering has on her. I mean, he’s still a horrible human, but just slightly better than King Hale who has no remorse at all.

Lily Gladstone is nothing short of brilliant. She doesn’t have a lot of lines, but she makes every scene count. Watch her face and notice how she’s hiding her emotions and thoughts, but look closely and you can see everything underneath. It is a subtle, fantastic performance.

This has grown too long. The film is long. At 3.5 hours you have to have patience with it. It isn’t a perfect film, that tension between the story that needs to be told and the one that Scorsese is able to tell sometimes falls on the wrong side. But it is a great film. One that tells a hugely important story in meaningful ways.

Five Cool Things and Moe Howard

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I think I’m going to go through all my Five Cool Things articles that I wrote for Cinema Sentries and post them here. I’ll do it in chronological order starting with the oldest.

I’m going to enjoy re-reading them and seeing how this series develops. For this one, my second ever to write, I talk a bit about how I came up with the idea and the name for the series. For the “And…” part I just used a picture of Moe Howard. I guess it took me a little while to actually start writing something about the sixth thing instead of just being silly.

I also write about Superman, Hell or High Water, Singing in the Rain, The Grateful Dead and Dumbo.

You can read it all here.

Torso is the Pick of the Week

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I recognize that no one really cares what my Blu-ray pick of the week is. Out of the few hundred people who will even see these articles there’s probably only a dozen or so that actually read them. And I can’t imagine any of them are in any way influenced by my choice.

I’m not an influencer. I don’t have millions of followers. You don’t have to click here and subscribe. And that’s okay. I’m fully satisfied with my tiny little corner of the internet.

So, yeah, I totally get that these picks aren’t in any way important. And yet. And still. I take them seriously. I actually do sit and think about what release is my pick.

This is why I must admit to you that this week, I messed up. I picked the wrong thing. Let me explain. What I actually picked this week was Torso, the pretty great, and stylish, and admittedly rather sleazy Giallo from director Sergio Martino. It has a new 4K upgrade from Arrow Video and they’ve loaded it with some new extras.

Normally that would be a great pick. But normally there aren’t nice releases of a Martin Scorsese film celebrating its 25th anniversary. The thing is I saw that release, but assumed it was just another bare-bones release.

That’s what makes these picks so difficult. Everything gets multiple releases now. There were DVD releases and Blu-ray releases, special editions, and anniversaries. Now there is 4K UHD. It never stops. I’m not smart enough to be able to keep up with all the releases and which film has come out in what format with which special features.

But that Bringing Out the Dead release looks pretty fab.

Anyway, my pick is Torso and you can read about it here.

Links of the Day: May 16, 2023 – Sammy Hagar, Dead & Co., Bob Dylan, Gordon Lightfoot…

The 46 Most Anticipated Albums of Summer 2023: Pitchfork

Watch Sammy Hagar + Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros Ring ‘In The Midnight Hour’ At Acoustic-4-A-Cure Benefit: Jambase

Dead & Company’s 2023 Farewell Tour: Everything you need to know: Sportskeeda

Dave McMurray’s “Grateful Deadication” at the Magic Bag, 5 things to know: Press and Guide

New book on Bob Dylan will feature hundreds of rare images: Japan Today

Gordon Lightfoot’s Final Album Announced: Pitchfork

Martin Scorsese: “I’m Old. I Want to Tell Stories, and There’s No More Time”: Vanity Fair

Live Review: Glenn Kotche at Senior Hall • Homewood: Illinois Entertainer

Links of the Day: May 15, 2023 – Bob Dylan, Dead & Co., Rodney Crowell & Lucinda Williams

Why fans of Bob Dylan, Leon Russell and Woody Guthrie are flocking to Tulsa: StarTribune

Dead and Company delivers rain or shine at Jazz Fest: Nola.com

Rodney Crowell’s “The Chicago Sessions” – Produced By Jeff Tweedy – Out Now Via New West Records: Grateful Web

Listen to Tom Russell, Calexico, and Lucinda Williams perform Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”: Boing Boing

Cannes: Why Martin Scorsese and Backers Declined a Spot in Competition for ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’: Variety

Lucinda Williams is not going down without a fight: Entertainment Weekly

Links of the Day: May 4, 2023: Martin Scorsese, Grateful Dead, and Neil Young

Martin Scorsese Found “the Key” to ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ By Immersing Himself in the World: Collider

Dave McMurray to Release Grateful Dead Tribute Album Featuring Don Was and Oteil Burbridge: Bass Magazine

Martin Scorsese, David Johansen Talk Making ‘Personality Crisis: One Night Only’ Documentary During Pandemic: Variety

The Grateful Dead to share previously unreleased 1973 concerts in new boxset: NME

Neil Young Pays Tribute to Gordon Lightfoot: ‘His Melodies and Words Were An Inspiration to All Writers’: Billboard

Links of the Day: April 26, 2023 – Wilco, Martin Scorsese, and Lucinda Williams

It has been a while since I’ve done one of these. Google changed the way they send me their alerts and it became a bit of a pain. But I’m trying to do lots of things to make this site interesting again just to see where I can take it. So hopefully I’ll do links posts more regularly.

Photo Gallery: Wilco at the Classic Center: Flagpole

Timothée Chalamet and Martin Scorsese Rode the Subway: Curbed

Lucinda Williams and her suitcase full of songs: NPR

Lucinda Williams on her soul-baring memoir: The Independent

See Faye Webster Join Wilco For Stirring ‘Jesus Etc.’ In Athens: Jambase

Lucinda Williams Bit Ryan Adams and Other Big Reveals in Her New Memoir: Rolling Stone

Links of the Day: February 17, 2023

Wilco Selling Guitars, Century-Old Organ, and Gear From Their Chicago Studio: Pitchfork

Martin Scorsese ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ is Still Being Edited: World of Reel

New John Lennon and Yoko Ono Documentary Announced: Pitchfork

Listen to isolated vocals of Tom Petty on ‘I Won’t Back Down’: Far Out

‘Jeopardy!’ Stumped Contestants On A Bob Dylan Question, And Their Guesses Were Truly Disheartening: Uproxx

Neil Young Announces First Concert Since Before Pandemic: Pitchfork

Links of the Day January 9, 2023

Van Morrison – Live at Real Studios – Box England – 2021: Youtube

Neil Diamond 1972-07-23 Seattle, WA: Guitars101

Bob Dylan’s “Rolling Stone” from Girl from the North Country: Youtube
There is a musical that tells a story based on a bunch of Dylan songs. I have a copy of the soundtrack and it is pretty good. I like what they do with this song here.

Remember When: Bob Dylan Honored His Hero in a Poem “Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie”: American Songwriter

The Core: Zero: Relix
A cool little retrospective on the great San Francisco band Zero. Has some nice bits about their relationship with Rober Hunter.

Martin Scorsese, Wes Anderson, Tilda Swinton & More Select Berlin Retrospective Movies; Classics & Other Lineups Revealed: Deadline